Titre :
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How nutritionally imbalanced is phloem sap for aphids?
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Auteurs :
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J. Sandstrom ;
N. Moran
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Type de document :
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article/chapitre/communication
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Année de publication :
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1999
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Format :
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203-210
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Langues:
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= Anglais
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Mots-clés:
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phloem sap
;
proteins
;
amino acids
;
aphids
;
symbionts
;
Buchnera
;
nutrition
;
Phloeme
;
Symbionte
;
Nutrition
;
Composition biochimique
;
Acide amine
;
Stylectomie
;
Aphididae
;
Rhopalosiphum padi
;
Uroleucon sonchi
;
Sonchus oleraceus
;
Triticum aestivum
;
Gramineae
;
Cereale
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Résumé :
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Aphids harbour intracellular symbionts (Buchnera) that provide their host with amino acids present in low amounts in their diet, phloem sap. To find out the extent to which aphids depend on their symbionts for synthesis of individual essential amino acids, we have evaluated how well phloem sap amino acid composition matches the aphids' needs. Amino acid compositions of the ingested phloem sap were compared to amino acids in aphid body proteins and also to available information about optimal diet composition for other plant feeding insects. Phloem sap data from severed stylets of two aphid species, Rhopalosiphum padi (L.) (Homoptera: Aphididae) feeding on wheat, and Uroleucon sonchi (L.) (Homoptera: Aphididae) feeding on Sonchus oleraceus (L.), together with published information on phloem sap compositions from other plant species were used. Phloem sap has in general only around 20% essential amino acids, with a range from 15-48%. Aphid body proteins and optimal diets for two other plant feeding insects have around 50%. The phloem sap of early flowering S. oleraceus ingested by U. sonchi contained 48%, which seems to be exceptional. Aphids feeding on different plants appear to be very differently dependent on their symbionts for their overall essential amino acid synthesis, due to the large variation in proportion of essential amino acids in phloem sap from different plants. The profile of the essential amino acids in phloem sap from different plant species corresponds rather well to profiles of both aphid body proteins and optimal diets determined for plant feeding insects. However, methionine and leucine in phloem sap are in general low in these comparisons, suggesting a higher dependence on the symbiont for synthesis of these amino acids. Concentrations of several essential amino acids in phloem from different plant species seem to vary together, suggesting that levels of symbiont provisioning of different amino acids are adjusted in parallel.
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Source :
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Entomologia Experimentalis Et Applicata - 0013-8703, vol. 91, n° 1,Proceedings, tenth international symposium on insect-plant relationships, Oxford, UK, 4-10 July 1998
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