Abstract
AbstractOligophagous insect herbivores specifically identify host-plant leaves using their keen sense of taste1. Plant secondary metabolites and sugars are key chemical cues for insects to identify host plants and evaluate their nutritional value, respectively2. However, it is poorly understood how the insect chemosensory system integrates the information from various gustatory inputs. Here we report that a two-step chemosensory system is responsible for host acceptance by larvae of the silkworm Bombyx mori, a specialist for several mulberry species. The first step controlled by a gustatory organ, the maxillary palp (MP), is host-plant recognition during palpation at the leaf edge. Surprisingly, MP detects chlorogenic acid, quercetin glycosides, and β-sitosterol, which stimulate feeding by the silkworm3–6, with ultra-sensitivity (thresholds of aM to fM). Detecting a mixture of these compounds triggers test biting. The second step is evaluation of the sugar content in the leaf sap exuded by test biting. Low-sensitivity chemosensory neurons in another gustatory organ, the maxillary galea (MG), mainly detect sucrose in the leaf sap exuded by test biting, allowing larvae to accept the leaf and proceed to persistent biting. Our present work shows the behavioral and neuronal basis of host acceptance in the silkworm, mainly driven by six phytochemicals. It also reveals that the ultra-sensitive gustation via MP strictly limits initiation of feeding in the silkworm unless it detects a certain combination of host compounds, suggesting an essential role of MP in host-plant selection. The two-step chemosensory system reported herein may commonly underlie stereotyped feeding behavior in phytophagous insects and determine their feeding habits.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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