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  3. Toxicity of Milkweed Leaves and Latex: Chromatographic Quantification Versus Biological Activity of Cardenolides in 16 Asclepias Species
 

Toxicity of Milkweed Leaves and Latex: Chromatographic Quantification Versus Biological Activity of Cardenolides in 16 Asclepias Species

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BORIS DOI
10.7892/boris.122688
Publisher DOI
10.1007/s10886-018-1040-3
PubMed ID
30523520
Description
Cardenolides are classically studied steroidal defenses in chemical ecology and plant-herbivore coevolution. Although milkweed plants (Asclepias spp.) produce up to 200 structurally different cardenolides, all compounds seemingly share the same well-characterized mode of action, inhibition of the ubiquitous Na+/K+ ATPase in animal cells. Over their evolutionary radiation, milkweeds show a quantitative decline of cardenolide production and diversity. This reduction is contrary to coevolutionary predictions and could represent a cost-saving strategy, i.e. production of fewer but more toxic cardenolides. Here we test this hypothesis by tandem cardenolide quantification using HPLC (UV absorption of the unsaturated lactone) and a pharmacological assay (in vitro inhibition of a sensitive Na+/K+ ATPase) in a comparative study of 16 species of Asclepias. We contrast cardenolide concentrations in leaf tissue to the subset of cardenolides present in exuding latex. Results from the two quantification methods were strongly correlated, but the enzymatic assay revealed that milkweed cardenolide mixtures often cause stronger inhibition than equal amounts of a non-milkweed reference cardenolide, ouabain. Cardenolide concentrations in latex and leaves were positively correlated across species, yet latex caused 27% stronger enzyme inhibition than equimolar amounts of leaf cardenolides. Using a novel multiple regression approach, we found three highly potent cardenolides (identified as calactin, calotropin, and voruscharin) to be primarily responsible for the increased pharmacological activity of milkweed cardenolide mixtures. However, contrary to an expected trade-off between concentration and toxicity, later-diverging milkweeds had the lowest amounts of these potent cardenolides, perhaps indicating an evolutionary response to milkweed’s diverse community of specialist cardenolide-sequestering insect herbivores.
Date of Publication
2019-01
Publication Type
Article
Subject(s)
500 Science > 580 Plants (Botany)
Keyword(s)
cardiac glycoside
•
coevolution
•
macroevolutionary escalation
•
mode of action
•
monarch butterfly
•
na+/k+ atpase
•
phylogenetic chemical ecology
•
plant-insect interactions
•
structure-activity relationships
•
target site insensitivity
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Züst, Tobias
Institut für Pflanzenwissenschaften (IPS)
Petschenka, Georg
Hastings, Amy P.
Agrawal, Anurag A.
Additional Credits
Institut für Pflanzenwissenschaften (IPS)
Series
Journal of Chemical Ecology
Publisher
Springer
ISSN
0098-0331
Related URL(s)
https://rdcu.be/bPylN
Access(Rights)
open.access
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