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. 2018 Nov;44(11):1030-1039.
doi: 10.1007/s10886-018-1002-9. Epub 2018 Aug 7.

α-Amylase Mediates Host Acceptance in the Braconid Parasitoid Cotesia flavipes

Affiliations

α-Amylase Mediates Host Acceptance in the Braconid Parasitoid Cotesia flavipes

Gladys Bichang'a et al. J Chem Ecol. 2018 Nov.

Abstract

Foraging parasitoids use chemical signals in host recognition and selection processes. Although, the volatiles play a relevant role in the localization by parasitoids of their hosts feeding on plants, the host identification process for acceptance occurs mainly during contact between the parasitoid and its host where host products related to feeding activities, fecal pellets and oral secretions, play a crucial role. The purpose of this study was to identify the nature of the contact kairomone(s) that mediate the acceptance for oviposition of the parasitoid Cotesia flavipes Cameron (Hymenoptera, Braconidae), which was released in Kenya in 1993 to control the invasive crambid Chilo partellus (Swinhoe). Using host and non-hosts of C. flavipes, we showed that it is mainly the oral secretions of the larvae that harbour the active compound(s) that mediate host acceptance for oviposition by C. flavipes. Using an integration of behavioral observations and biochemical approaches, the active compound of the oral secretions was identified as an α-amylase. Using synthetized α-amylases from Drosophila melanogaster (an insect model for which syntheses of active and inactive α-amylases are available), we observed that the conformation of the enzyme rather than its catalytic site as well as its substrate and its degradation product is responsible for host acceptance and oviposition mediation of C. flavipes females. The results suggest that the α-amylase from oral secretions of the caterpillar host is a good candidate for an evolutionary solution to host acceptance for oviposition in C. flavipes.

Keywords: Biological control; Chilo partellus; Cotesia flavipes; Host oral secretion; Host recognition; Kairomone; Lepidoptera stemborers; Multitrophic interactions; Parasitoids; Pest insects; Semiochemicals; α-amylase.

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