Olfactory receptor phylogeny reveals conserved channels for sex
pheromone and host plant signals in tortricid moths
Abstract
The search for mates and food is mediated by volatile chemicals. Insects
sense food odorants and sex pheromones through odorant receptors (ORs)
and pheromone receptors (PRs), which are expressed in olfactory sensory
neurons. Investigating the receptive range of these receptors instructs
the identification of behaviourally relevant chemicals. Studying
orthologous receptors and their ligands across taxa affords insights
into the role of chemical communication in reproductive isolation and
phylogenetic divergence. The female sex pheromone of green budworm moth
Hedya nubiferana (Lepidoptera, Totricidae) is a blend of two unsaturated
acetates, only a blend of both elicits male attraction. Females also
produce codlemone, which is the sex pheromone of another tortricid,
codling moth Cydia pomonella. Codlemone also attracts green budworm moth
males. Concomitantly, green budworm and codling moth males are attracted
to the food plant volatile pear ester. A congruent behavioural response
to the same pheromone and plant volatile in two tortricid species
suggests co-occurrence of dedicated odorant receptors. In codling moth,
one PR is tuned to both compounds, the sex pheromone codlemone and the
plant volatile pear ester. Our phylogenetic analysis finds that green
budworm moth expresses an orthologous PR gene. Shared ancestry, and high
levels of amino acid identity and sequence similarity, in codling and
green budworm moth PRs offers an explanation for parallel attraction of
both species to the same compounds. A conserved olfactory channel for a
sex pheromone and host plant volatile substantiates the alliance of
social and habitat signals in insect chemical communication. Field
attraction assays confirm that in silico investigations of odorant
receptors afford powerful predictions for an efficient identification of
behaviour-modifying semiochemicals, for an improved understanding of the
mechanisms of host plant attraction in insect herbivores and for the
further development of sustainable insect control.