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result(s) for
"Pare, P.W. (USDA, ARS, Center for Medical Agricultural and Veterinary Entomology, Gainesville, FL.)"
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Concerted biosynthesis of an insect elicitor of plant volatiles
by
Pare, P.W. (USDA, ARS, Center for Medical Agricultural and Veterinary Entomology, Gainesville, FL.)
,
Tumlinson, J.H
,
Alborn, H.T
in
ACIDE AMINE
,
ACIDE LINOLENIQUE
,
ACIDO LINOLENICO
1998
A variety of agricultural plant species, including corn, respond to insect herbivore damage by releasing large quantities of volatile compounds and, as a result, become highly attractive to parasitic wasps that attack the herbivores. An elicitor of plant volatiles, N-(17-hydroxylinolenoyl)-L- glutamine, named volicitin and isolated from beet armyworm caterpillars, is a key component in plant recognition of damage from insect herbivory. Chemical analysis of the oral secretion from beet armyworms that have fed on 13C-labeled corn seedlings established that the fatty acid portion of volicitin is plant derived whereas the 17-hydroxylation reaction and the conjugation with glutamine are carried out by the caterpillar by using glutamine of insect origin. Ironically, these insect-catalyzed chemical modifications to linolenic acid are critical for the biological activity that triggers the release of plant volatiles, which in turn attract natural enemies of the caterpillar
Journal Article