Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"Despland E" Authored Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Longhorn beetles (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae) community composition around different boreal infrastructures Noor S; Despland E; Montoro Girona M; Work T; 41638151
BIOLOGY
2 Limited Differences in Insect Herbivory on Young White Spruce Growing in Small Open Plantations and under Natural Canopies in Boreal Mixed Forests Yataco AP; Noor S; Girona MM; Work T; Despland E; 38535391
BIOLOGY
3 Ontogenetic shift from aposematism and gregariousness to crypsis in a Romaleid grasshopper. Despland E 32817631
BIOLOGY
4 Top-down and bottom-up controls on an herbivore on a native and introduced plant in a tropical agricultural landscape. Despland E, Santacruz PG 32206453
BIOLOGY
5 How does synchrony with host plant affect the performance of an outbreaking insect defoliator? Fuentealba A, Pureswaran D, Bauce É, Despland E 28756489
BIOLOGY
6 Detoxification of host plant phenolic aglycones by the spruce budworm. Donkor D, Mirzahosseini Z, Bede J, Bauce E, Despland E 31095557
BIOLOGY

 

Title:Detoxification of host plant phenolic aglycones by the spruce budworm.
Authors:Donkor DMirzahosseini ZBede JBauce EDespland E
Link:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31095557?dopt=Abstract
Publication:
Keywords:
PMID:31095557 Category:PLoS One Date Added:2019-06-07
Dept Affiliation: BIOLOGY
1 Biology Department, Concordia University, Montreal, Canada.
2 Department of Plant Science, McGill University, Ste-Anne-de-Bellevue, Canada.
3 Département des sciences du bois et de la forêt, Université Laval, Ste-Foy, Canada.

Description:

Detoxification of host plant phenolic aglycones by the spruce budworm.

PLoS One. 2019;14(5):e0208288

Authors: Donkor D, Mirzahosseini Z, Bede J, Bauce E, Despland E

Abstract

This study examines the post-ingestive fate of two host-plant derived small-molecule phenolics (the acetophenones piceol and pungenol) that have previously been shown to be toxic to the outbreaking forest pest, spruce budworm (Choristoneura fumiferana). We test first whether these compounds are transformed during passage through the midgut, and second whether the budworm upregulates activity of the detoxification enzyme glutathione-s-transferase (GST) in response to feeding on these compounds. Insects were reared on either foliage or artificial diet to the fourth instar, when they were transferred individually to one of two treatment diets, either control or phenolic-laced, for approximately 10 days, after which midguts were dissected out and used for Bradford soluble protein and GST enzyme activity analysis. Frass was collected and subjected to HPLC-DAD-MS. HPLC showed that the acetophenones do not autoxidize under midgut pH conditions, but that glucose- and glutathione- conjugates are present in the frass of insects fed the phenolic-laced diet. GST enzyme activity increases in insects fed the phenolic-laced diet, in both neutral pH and alkaline assays. These data show that the spruce budwom exhibits counter-adaptations to plant phenolics similar to those seen in angiosperm feeders, upregulating an important detoxifying enzyme (GST) and partially conjugating these acetophenones prior to elimination, but that these counter-measures are not totally effective at mitigating toxic effects of the ingested compounds in the context of our artifical-diet based laboratory experiment.

PMID: 31095557 [PubMed - in process]





BookR developed by Sriram Narayanan
for the Concordia University School of Health
Copyright © 2011-2026
Cookie settings
Concordia University