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  4. Volicitin, an elicitor of maize volatiles in oral secretion of Spodoptera exigua: Isolation and bioactivity

Volicitin, an elicitor of maize volatiles in oral secretion of Spodoptera exigua: Isolation and bioactivity

Author(s)
Turlings, Ted  
Laboratoire de recherches fondamentales et appliquées en écologie chimique  
Alborn, Hans
Loughrin, John H
Tumlinson, James H
Date issued
2000
In
Journal of Chemical Ecology
Vol
1
No
26
From page
189
To page
202
Subjects
volicitin induced plant volatiles elicitor parasitoid attractants Zea mays Spodoptera exigua Microplitis croceipes MICROPLITIS-CROCEIPES CRESSON PARASITIC WASPS AIRBORNE SEMIOCHEMICALS COTESIA-MARGINIVENTRIS BETA-GLUCOSIDASE CHEMICAL SIGNALS FLIGHT BEHAVIOR HOST-LOCATION PLANTS LEPIDOPTERA
Abstract
Plants respond to insect-inflicted injury by systemically releasing relatively large amounts of several volatile compounds, mostly terpenoids and indole. As a result, the plants become highly attractive to natural enemies of the herbivorous insects. In maize, this systemic response can be induced by the uptake via the stem of an elicitor present in the oral secretions of caterpillars. Such an elicitor was isolated from the regurgitant of Spodoptera exigua larvae, identified as N-(17-hydroxylinolenoyl)-L-glutamine, and named volicitin. Here we present details on the procedure that was used to isolate volicitin and the biosasays that demonstrate its potency as an elicitor of maize volatiles that attract parasitoids. With a series of liquid chromatography purification steps, volicitin was separated from all other inactive substances in the regurgitant of larvae of the noctuid moth S. exigua. Maize seedlings that were incubated in very low concentrations of pure natural volicitin released relatively large amounts of terpenoids and became highly attractive to the parasitoid Microplitis croceipes. The identification of this and other insect-derived elicitors should allow us to determine their precise source and function, and better understand the evolutionary history of the phenomenon of herbivore-induced volatile emissions in plants.
Publication type
journal article
Identifiers
https://libra.unine.ch/handle/20.500.14713/53784
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