Raw data associated with "Potent nitrogen-containing milkweed toxins are differentially regulated by soil nitrogen and herbivore-induced defense" - Journal of Chemical Ecology
收藏NIAID Data Ecosystem2026-05-02 收录
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https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Raw_data_associated_with_Potent_nitrogen-containing_milkweed_toxins_are_differentially_regulated_by_soil_nitrogen_and_herbivore-induced_defense_-_Journal_of_Chemical_Ecology/26860192
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We tested effects of soil N and herbivore-damage on cardenolide profiles of two milkweed species differing in life-history strategies (Asclepias syriaca and A. curassavica), and the toxicity of their leaves. In particular leaf extracts were tested against the target enzymes (Na+/K+-ATPase extracted from neural tissue) from both monarch butterflies (Danaus plexippus) as well as less cardenolide-resistant queen butterflies, D. gilippus. Increasing soil N enhanced biomass of Asclepias syriaca but had weak effects on cardenolides, including causing a significant reduction in the N-cardenolide labriformin; feeding by monarch caterpillars strongly induced N-cardenolides (labriformin), its precursors, and total cardenolides. Conversely, soil N had little impact on A. curassavica biomass, but was the primary driver of increasing N-cardenolides (voruscharin, uscharin and their precursors); caterpillar induction was weak. Butterfly enzyme assays revealed damage-induced cardenolides substantially increased toxicity of both milkweeds to both butterflies, swamping out effects of soil N on cardenolide concentration and composition. Although these two milkweed species differentially responded to soil N with allocation to growth and specific cardenolides, leaf toxicity to butterfly Na+/K+-ATPases was primarily driven by feeding-induced defense.
创建时间:
2024-08-28



