Effects of protein and juglone on gypsy moths: growth performance and detoxification enzyme activity

The individual and interactive effects of dietary protein and juglone on larval performance and midgut detoxification enzymes were investigated for the gypsy moth, Lymantria dispar. The experimental design was a 2 X 3 factorial, with two levels of protein and three levels of juglone. We monitored su...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of chemical ecology 1990-08, Vol.16 (8), p.2533-2547
Hauptverfasser: Lindroth, R.L. (University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI), Anson, B.D, Weisbrod, A.V
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creator Lindroth, R.L. (University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI)
Anson, B.D
Weisbrod, A.V
description The individual and interactive effects of dietary protein and juglone on larval performance and midgut detoxification enzymes were investigated for the gypsy moth, Lymantria dispar. The experimental design was a 2 X 3 factorial, with two levels of protein and three levels of juglone. We monitored survival/development rates from egg hatch to pupation and conducted fourth-instar feeding trials for determination of nutritional indices. Enzyme solutions were prepared from midguts of fifth instars and assayed for polysubstrate monooxygenase, esterase, quinone reductase, and glutathione transferase activities. Results showed that low protein levels prolonged development times, increased consumption rates. and reduced pupal weights. Juglone markedly reduced survival, growth, and consumption rates, increased development times, and reduced pupal weights. The interaction between protein and juglone influenced larval digestion efficiencies and female pupal weights. Polysubstrate monooxygenase activities were unaffected by diet, whereas esterase activities increased in response to both low dietary protein and presence of juglone. Low protein levels increased soluble quinone reductase activities but decreased glutathione transferase activities. Glutathione transferase activities were lowest in larvae fed low-protein, high-juglone diets and may have contributed to the especially poor performance of larvae on those diets. Quinone reductase and glutathione transferase are the systems of importance in detoxification of juglone, and moderate to low activities of these enzymes may explain why gypsy moths perform poorly on members of the Juglandaceae
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subjects Biochemistry. Physiology. Immunology
Biological and medical sciences
DESARROLLO BIOLOGICO
DESINTOXICACION
DETOXIFICATION
DEVELOPPEMENT BIOLOGIQUE
DIETA
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Insecta
Invertebrates
Lepidoptera
LYMANTRIA DISPAR
Lymantriidae
METABOLISME
METABOLISMO
Physiology. Development
PROTEINAS
PROTEINE
QUINONAS
QUINONE
REGIME ALIMENTAIRE
title Effects of protein and juglone on gypsy moths: growth performance and detoxification enzyme activity
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