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Published on February 9, 2007; 10.1104/pp.107.095588


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Received January 6, 2007
Accepted January 29, 2007

Stability of Plant Defense Proteins in the Gut of Insect Herbivores

Hui Chen , Eliana Gonzales-Vigil , Curtis G. Wilkerson , and Gregg A. Howe *

Department of Energy-Plant Research Laboratory; Michigan Proteome Consortium; Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI 48824, USA

* Corresponding author; email: howeg{at}msu.edu.

Plant defense against insect herbivores is mediated in part by enzymes that impair digestive processes in the insect gut. Little is known about the evolutionary origins of these enzymes, their distribution in the plant kingdom, or the mechanisms by which they act in the protease-rich environment of the animal digestive tract. One example of such an enzyme is threonine deaminase (TD), which in tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) serves a dual role in Ile biosynthesis in planta and Thr degradation in the insect midgut. Here, we report that tomato uses different TD isozymes to perform these functions. Whereas the constitutively expressed TD1 has a housekeeping role in Ile biosynthesis, expression of TD2 in leaves is activated by the jasmonate signaling pathway in response to herbivore attack. Ingestion of tomato foliage by specialist (Manduca sexta) and generalist (Trichoplusia ni) insect herbivores triggered proteolytic removal of TD2's C-terminal regulatory domain, resulting in an enzyme that degrades Thr without being inhibited through feedback by Ile. This processed form (pTD2) of TD2 accumulated to high levels in the insect midgut and feces (frass). Purified pTD2 exhibited biochemical properties that are consistent with a post-ingestive role in defense. Shotgun proteomic analysis of frass from tomato-reared M. sexta identified pTD2 as one of the most abundant proteins in the excrement. Among the other tomato proteins identified were several jasmonate-inducible proteins that have a known or proposed role in anti-insect defense. Subtilisin-like proteases and other pathogenesis-related proteins, as well as proteins of unknown function, were also catalogued. We conclude that proteomic analysis of frass from insect herbivores provides a robust experimental approach to identify hyperstable plant proteins that serve important roles in defense.




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