Effect of sucrose concentration on carbohydrate metabolism in Bemisia argentifolii: biochemical mechanism and physiological role for trehalulose synthesis in the silverleaf whitefly
1997
Salvucci, M.E. | Wolfe, G.R. | Hendrix, D.L.
Uptake and metabolism of sucrose by adult silverleaf whiteflies (Bemisia argentifolii) were investigated on defined diets containing sucrose concentrations from 3 to 30% (w/v). At an optimal pH of 7, the volume of liquid ingested decreased with increasing dietary sucrose concentration, but the amount of sucrose ingested showed a net increase. Above a dietary sucrose concentration of about 10%, a greater amount of the ingested carbon was excreted by the white flies than was retained, and the proportion that was excreted increased progressively with increasing dietary sucrose concentration. Carbohydrate analysis showed that the composition of excreted honeydew changed from predominantly glucose and fructose at low dietary sucrose concentrations to predominantly trehalulose at high concentrations, with little change in the proportion of larger oligosaccharides. Measurements of whitefly trehalulose synthase and sucrase activities revealed that the enzymatic potential for metabolizing sucrose shifted from favoring sucrose hydrolysis at low sucrose concentrations to sucrose isomerization at high sucrose concentrations. Thus, the amount of trehalulose synthesized by the silverleaf whitefly was directly related to the properties of trehalulose synthase and sucrase and the concentration of sucrose in the diet. We propose that trehalulose is synthesized for excretion when the carbon input from sucrose is in excess of metabolic needs.
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