Cyanogenic glycosides and plant-herbivore interactions
K Naveena, C Chinniah and M Shanthi
Cyanogenic glycosides are nitrogen containing secondary metabolites which offer plant defense mechanism against herbivores while recently various insects have developed ability to detoxify, sequester and synthesize these cyanogenic compounds. Dhurrin was the first identified and isolated CNGs from young leaves of sorghum, Sorghum vulgare. The presence of CNGs were confirmed in few species of Chilopods, Diplopods, Heteropterans, Coleopterans and Lepidopterans. Linamarin and Lotaustralin were the major CNGs distributed in Lepidopterans. They have developed an ability to de novo synthesize CNGs and detoxify them with the help of β-cyanoalanine synthase and rhodonase. This may be due to the course of insect evolution or the genes responsible for the synthesis of CNGs may get transferred from plants to insects. In future, the responsive genes in these arthropods should be silenced and expansion of transgenic cyanogenic plants may encouraged to ensure plant defense mechanism.
K Naveena, C Chinniah, M Shanthi. Cyanogenic glycosides and plant-herbivore interactions. J Entomol Zool Stud 2021;9(1):1345-1350. DOI: 10.22271/j.ento.2021.v9.i1s.8327