Oviposition is evoked by plant compounds, which are recognized by chemoreceptive organs of insects. The swallowtail butterfly, Atrophaneura alcinous, oviposits its eggs on the host plant, Aristolochia debilis, in the presence of only two stimulating compounds: an alkaloid, aristolochic acid, and a monosaccharide, sequoyitol. In our previous study, a unique protein of 23 kDa [Oviposition stimulant(s) binding protein (OSBP)] was found in the forelegs of female, but not male A. alcinous. The electrophysiological response of A. alcinous to an extract of A. debilis was depressed by the presence of OSBP antiserum, suggesting that OSBP presumably binds to oviposition stimulant(s). We show here, using a highly sensitive fluorescence micro-binding assay that native OSBP binds to a main oviposition stimulant, aristolochic acid, from its host plant, A. debilis. Three-dimensional molecular modeling studies also gave a reasonable structure for the OSBP/aristolochic acid complex. This is the first report of a native chemoreceptive protein binding to an oviposition stimulant ligand in insects.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2734047PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.4161/cib.2.4.8613DOI Listing

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