Increasing evidence highlights the importance of diet content in nine essential amino acids for bee physiological and behavioural performance. However, the 10th essential amino acid, tryptophan, has been overlooked as its experimental measurement requires a specific hydrolysis. Tryptophan is the precursor of serotonin and vitamin B3, which together modulate cognitive and metabolic functions in most animals. Here, we investigated how tryptophan deficiencies influence the behaviour and survival of bumble bees (). Tryptophan-deficient diets led to a moderate increase in food intake, aggressiveness and mortality compared with the control diet. Vitamin B3 supplementation in tryptophan-deficient diets tended to buffer these effects by significantly improving survival and reducing aggressiveness. Considering that the pollens of major crops and common plants, such as corn and dandelion, are deficient in tryptophan, these effects could have a strong impact on bumble bee populations and their pollination service. Our results suggest planting tryptophan and B3 rich species next to tryptophan-deficient crops could support wild bee populations.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/conphys/coac084 | DOI Listing |
Background: Abnormal glucose metabolism in AD brains correlates with cognitive deficits. The glucose changes are consistent with brain thiamine (vitamin B1) deficiency. In animals, thiamine deficiency causes multiple AD-like changes including memory loss, neuron loss, brain inflammation, enhanced phosphorylation of tau, exaggerated plaque formation and elevated advanced glycation end products (AGE).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInsects
December 2024
College of Plant Protection, Hebei Agricultural University, Baoding 071001, China.
, an obligate endosymbiont of most aphid species, can influence aphids' host adaptability through amino acid metabolism, potentially mediating biotype differentiation. However, its role in the biotype differentiation of remains unclear. To address this issue, six biotypes were tested in this study.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Psychiatry
December 2024
Institute of Translational Biomedicine, St. Petersburg State University, St. Petersburg, Russia.
Introduction: Aggression and self-harm disproportionately occur in youths preoccupied with social status tracking. These pathological conditions are linked to a serotonin (5-HT) deficit in the brain. Ablation of 5-HT biosynthesis by tryptophan hydroxylase 2 knockout (TPH2-KO) increases aggression in rodents.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCold Spring Harb Protoc
December 2024
Christopher S. Bond Life Sciences Center, Division of Biological Sciences, Interdisciplinary Plant Group, University of Missouri, Columbia, Missouri 65211, USA
In cereal crops, seed quality is determined by the composition and levels of protein-bound amino acids, which account for ∼90% of the seed total amino acid content. In maize particularly, seed quality is affected by the low levels of lysine and tryptophan, two amino acids that humans and animals cannot synthesize and must obtain from the diet. The low levels of these two amino acids in seeds is due to the dominance of seed storage proteins, namely zeins, which are deficient in these two amino acids.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSerotonin exerts numerous neurological and physiological actions in the brain and in the periphery. It is generated by two different tryptophan hydroxylase enzymes, TPH1 and TPH2, in the periphery and in the brain, respectively, which are members of the aromatic amino acid hydroxylase (AAAH) family together with phenylalanine hydroxylase (PAH), degrading phenylalanine, and tyrosine hydroxylase (TH), generating dopamine. In this study, we show that the co-chaperone DNAJC12 is downregulated in serotonergic neurons in the brain of mice lacking TPH2 and thereby central serotonin.
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