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Pflugers Arch


Title:To flourish or perish: evolutionary TRiPs into the sensory biology of plant-herbivore interactions
Author(s):Startek JB; Voets T; Talavera K;
Address:"Laboratory of Ion Channel Research, Department of Cellular and Molecular Medicine, KU Leuven, Herestraat 49, Campus Gasthuisberg O&N1 bus 802, 3000, Leuven, Belgium. justyna.startek@kuleuven.vib.be. VIB Center for Brain & Disease Research, Leuven, Belgium. justyna.startek@kuleuven.vib.be. Laboratory of Ion Channel Research, Department of Cellular and Molecular Medicine, KU Leuven, Herestraat 49, Campus Gasthuisberg O&N1 bus 802, 3000, Leuven, Belgium. VIB Center for Brain & Disease Research, Leuven, Belgium"
Journal Title:Pflugers Arch
Year:2019
Volume:20180918
Issue:2
Page Number:213 - 236
DOI: 10.1007/s00424-018-2205-1
ISSN/ISBN:1432-2013 (Electronic) 0031-6768 (Linking)
Abstract:"The interactions between plants and their herbivores are highly complex systems generating on one side an extraordinary diversity of plant protection mechanisms and on the other side sophisticated consumer feeding strategies. Herbivores have evolved complex, integrative sensory systems that allow them to distinguish between food sources having mere bad flavors from the actually toxic ones. These systems are based on the senses of taste, olfaction and somatosensation in the oral and nasal cavities, and on post-ingestive chemosensory mechanisms. The potential ability of plant defensive chemical traits to induce tissue damage in foragers is mainly encoded in the latter through chemesthetic sensations such as burning, pain, itch, irritation, tingling, and numbness, all of which induce innate aversive behavioral responses. Here, we discuss the involvement of transient receptor potential (TRP) channels in the chemosensory mechanisms that are at the core of complex and fascinating plant-herbivore ecological networks. We review how 'sensory' TRPs are activated by a myriad of plant-derived compounds, leading to cation influx, membrane depolarization, and excitation of sensory nerve fibers of the oronasal cavities in mammals and bitter-sensing cells in insects. We also illustrate how TRP channel expression patterns and functionalities vary between species, leading to intriguing evolutionary adaptations to the specific habitats and life cycles of individual organisms"
Keywords:"Adaptation, Physiological/physiology Animals Herbivory/*physiology Humans Insecta/*metabolism/*physiology Plants/*metabolism Sensory Receptor Cells/*metabolism/physiology Taste/physiology Transient Receptor Potential Channels/*metabolism Herbivores Noxiou;"
Notes:"MedlineStartek, Justyna B Voets, Thomas Talavera, Karel eng Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't Review Germany 2018/09/20 Pflugers Arch. 2019 Feb; 471(2):213-236. doi: 10.1007/s00424-018-2205-1. Epub 2018 Sep 18"

 
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