Subtype Expression Fluctuates in the Great Mormon, , with Changes in the Components of the Host Plants.

Insects

Cooperative Major in Advanced Health Science, Graduate School of Bio-Applications and System Engineering, Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology, Tokyo 183-8509, Japan.

Published: February 2025

Cytochrome P-450 (CYP) is one of the metabolic enzymes which is conserved among organisms to metabolise xenobiotics. The metabolic role and transcriptomic profiles of the CYP6B subfamily have been studied in some Papilionidae insects. However, the role of s expressed in Rutaceae plant-fed swallowtails has yet to be fully examined. Here, the expression profile of in the Great Mormon () larvae, which prefer Citrus plants to the Rutaceae plant, was investigated by RNA sequencing analysis and real-time quantitative PCR when feeding different kinds of Citrus plants. We found that six kinds of subtype transcripts were expressed in the larval fat body and midgut. Then, we focused on , , and transcripts and examined their mRNA expression in the larvae fed on different plants. These mRNA expressions were changed in the larval fat body and the midgut by changing the host plants. The presence of chemicals specific to each host plant was confirmed when the host plant components were examined by database, literature, and thin-layer chromatography. Our study suggests that phytochemicals in the host plant affect subtypes mRNA expression in larval fat body and midgut, and CYP6B subtypes may relate to metabolise the phytochemicals in the host plants.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11856695PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/insects16020159DOI Listing

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