학술논문

Sex Pheromone Biosynthetic Pathway for Disparlure in the Gypsy Moth, Lymantria dispar
Document Type
research-article
Source
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 2003 Feb 01. 100(3), 809-814.
Subject
Agricultural Sciences
Moths
Alkenes
Pheromone glands
Deuterium
Sex attractants
Hydrocarbons
Ions
Hexanes
Insect biochemistry
Hemolymph
Language
English
ISSN
00278424
Abstract
The pheromone biosynthetic pathway for production of the sex pheromone disparlure, 2-methyl-7R,8S-epoxy-octadecane, was determined for the gypsy moth. Each step in the pathway was followed by using deuterium-labeled compounds that could be identified by using GC/MS. This approach provides unequivocal determination of specific reactions in the pathway. It was shown that the alkene precursor, 2-methyl-Z7-octadecene, is most likely made in oenocyte cells associated with abdominal epidermal cells. The pathway begins with valine contributing carbons for chain initiation, including the methyl-branched carbon, followed by chain elongation to 19 carbons. The double bond is introduced with an unusual Δ12 desaturase that utilizes a methyl-branched substrate. The resulting 18-methyl-Z12-nonadecenoate is decarboxylated to the hydrocarbon, 2-methyl-Z7-octadecene. The alkene is then transported to the pheromone gland through the hemolymph, most probably by lipophorin. At the pheromone gland, the alkene is unloaded and transformed into the epoxide disparlure for release into the environment. A chiral HPLC column was used to demonstrate that the (R,S)-stereoisomer of the epoxide, (+)-disparlure is found in pheromone glands.