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First published online August 17, 2007
Journal of Experimental Biology 210, 3054-3067 (2007)
Published by The Company of Biologists 2007
doi: 10.1242/jeb.004671
The hungry caterpillar: an analysis of how carbohydrates stimulate feeding in Manduca sexta
Department of Biological Sciences, Barnard College, Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, New York, NY 10027, USA
* Author for correspondence (e-mail: jglendinning{at}barnard.edu)
Accepted 26 June 2007
| Summary |
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Key words: taste cell, carbohydrates, sugars, sensory coding, feeding, Manduca sexta
| Introduction |
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|
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In the present study, we examined an insect (Manduca sexta
caterpillars; Sphingidae) that appears to contradict the predictions of the
Schoonhoven and Blom model (Schoonhoven
and Blom, 1988
). Despite displaying a robust aversive response to
bitter stimuli (Frazier, 1986
;
Glendinning et al., 1999
;
Glendinning et al., 2006
),
M. sexta shows a weak-to-nonexistent appetitive response to amino
acids and carbohydrates (Bowdan,
1995
; Glendinning et al.,
2000
). The lackluster appetitive response to carbohydrates is
perplexing because the peripheral gustatory system of M. sexta
responds vigorously to carbohydrates. For instance, even though glucose (100
mmol l–1) and inositol (10 mmol l–1) each
strongly stimulate several classes of taste cell, the caterpillars take as
many bites (over a 2-min test) from disks treated with glucose or inositol as
from disks treated with water alone
(Glendinning et al.,
2000
).
Given that most plant tissues contain multiple carbohydrates
(Hardinge et al., 1965
;
Somogyi and Trautner, 1974
;
Clements and Darnell, 1980
;
Nelson and Bernays, 1998
), it
is possible that a herbivorous insect such as M. sexta would have
evolved a taste system that responds selectively to mixtures of carbohydrates.
If so, then this would explain why single carbohydrates (e.g. glucose or
inositol) were so ineffective at eliciting an appetitive response in previous
studies (Bowdan, 1995
;
Glendinning et al., 2000
). In
humans, carbohydrate mixtures often produce synergistic effects, such that the
mixture generates a sweetness intensity that is higher than would be predicted
based on the sum of the intensities generated by the individual component
carbohydrates (Schiffman et al.,
1995
; Schiffman et al.,
2000
). Similarly, in rodents, binary mixtures of sweeteners can
stimulate intake much more effectively than individual sweeteners
(Valenstein et al., 1967
;
Capretta, 1970
;
Smith et al., 1976
).
Like many other insects (Schoonhoven
and van Loon, 2002
; Thorne et
al., 2004
; Wang et al.,
2004
), M. sexta has a heterogeneous population of
carbohydrate-sensitive taste cells. It has three bilateral pairs of
carbohydrate-sensitive taste cells, and at least two of these pairs have
different response properties
(Schoonhoven, 1969
). As a
result of this peripheral organization, it follows that (1) no single
carbohydrate could stimulate all three classes of carbohydrate-sensitive taste
cell, and (2) some carbohydrate mixtures could stimulate more
carbohydrate-sensitive taste cells than others. We hypothesized that M.
sexta monitors the pattern of input from the different classes of
carbohydrate-sensitive taste cell, and that it activates an appetitive
response only when all three classes of taste cell are activated
simultaneously. To test this hypothesis, we performed three experiments. In
Experiment 1, we determined which carbohydrates activate the peripheral taste
system of M. sexta. In Experiment 2, we ascertained the response
properties of the different carbohydrate-sensitive taste cells. In Experiment
3, we asked whether the magnitude (or intensity) of the initial feeding
response increases with the number of activated carbohydrate-sensitive taste
cells.
| Materials and methods |
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|
|
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Experiment 1: which carbohydrates generate excitatory responses in the lateral and medial styloconic sensilla?
We tested seven carbohydrates: six simple and one complex. Four of the
simple carbohydrates are relatively abundant in the insect's host plants
[myo-inositol, sucrose, fructose and glucose
(Nelson and Bernays, 1998
)],
and the other two are known to stimulate taste cells in other caterpillar
species [maltose and trehalose
(Schoonhoven and van Loon,
2002
)]. The complex carbohydrate, PolycoseTM, is a mixture of
glucose polymers ranging from G1 (glucose) to G30; it is water-soluble, has an
average molecular weight of 1000 Da (provided by the manufacturer), and
stimulates feeding in many species of mammal
(Sclafani, 1987
). We
considered polycose to be a representative starch, the most abundant
carbohydrate in plants.
We tested all carbohydrates, except inositol and Polycose, at a 200 mmol
l–1 concentration. We selected 200 mmol l–1
because preliminary studies indicated that it is the lowest concentration that
elicits a maximal neural response in both sensilla. We used a 1 mmol
l–1 concentration of inositol because preliminary studies
indicated that it elicited an excitatory response similar to that of 200 mmol
l–1 sucrose. We used 100 mmol l–1 Polycose
because this concentration is highly palatable to several species of rodent
(Sclafani, 1987
;
Glendinning et al., 2005
). For
the taste cell recordings, we presented the carbohydrates in an electrolyte
solution (i.e. 100 mmol l–1 KCl in deionized water). We
purchased all carbohydrates, except Polycose, from Sigma-Aldrich (St Louis,
MO, USA); we obtained the Polycose from Abbott Laboratories (Columbus, OH,
USA).
For those carbohydrates that elicited an excitatory response in at least one class of taste sensillum (i.e. a response significantly greater than that to solvent alone), we generated concentration–response curves. To this end, we selected concentrations that spanned the dynamic range of response.
Electrophysiological recordings
Following 30 min of food deprivation, we recorded neural responses of each
taste sensillum with a non-invasive extracellular tip-recording technique
(Gothilf and Hanson, 1994
). In
brief, we placed a glass electrode containing a taste stimulus solution over
the tip of a lateral or medial styloconic sensillum
(Fig. 1A,B). To minimize any
potential carry-over between successive recordings, we paused for at least 3
min between stimulations. To minimize the effects of solvent evaporation at
the tip of the recording/stimulating electrode, we drew fluid from the tip
with a piece of filter paper immediately before stimulation. For each
caterpillar, we made recordings from a single lateral and a single medial
styloconic sensillum.
|
Data analysis
In this experiment, we tallied the total excitatory response (i.e. total
number of spikes that occurred during the initial 1000 ms of stimulation)
separately for each taste sensillum. To determine which of the carbohydrate
solutions elicited a detectable excitatory response, we compared the number of
spikes elicited by the electrolyte solution alone with that elicited by each
carbohydrate solution, using one-way factorial analysis of variance (ANOVA)
and Tukey's honestly significant difference (HSD) test. For those
carbohydrates that generated strong excitatory responses, we also obtained
concentration–response curves. We analyzed the curve for each
carbohydrate and sensillum separately, using one-way repeated-measures (RM)
ANOVA. In this and all subsequent experiments, we set the alpha level at
0.05.
Experiment 2: what are the response properties of each class of carbohydrate-sensitive taste cell?
We used the tip-recording technique to record excitatory responses of the
lateral and medial styloconic sensilla to the following stimulus triads: (1)
glucose, sucrose and the binary mixture of both; (2) glucose, inositol and the
binary mixture of both; and (3) sucrose, inositol and the binary mixture of
both. We used the same concentrations of each carbohydrate as in the previous
experiment, and stimulated one lateral and one medial sensillum from each
caterpillar with each stimulus triad. To control for order effects, we
randomized the presentation sequence of the triads, and the stimuli within
each triad.
|
|
During the analysis, we found that the response of the lateral styloconic sensilla to sucrose always contained a population of spikes that followed a tonic pattern of firing (as indicated by a unimodal distribution of inter-spike intervals); the remaining spikes occurred less frequently and out-of-phase with the tonic pattern. In this case, we assigned the spikes that fit the tonic pattern to the `dominant' category, and the remaining spikes to the `non-dominant' category. However, the response of the lateral and medial styloconic sensilla to glucose or inositol always contained a population of spikes that followed a phasic-tonic pattern of firing (as indicated by a bimodal distribution of inter-spike intervals); the remaining spikes occurred less frequently and out-of-phase with the phasic-tonic pattern. In this latter case, we assigned the spikes that fit the phasic-tonic pattern to the `dominant' category, and the remaining spikes to the `non-dominant' category. Note that we assume that spikes assigned to the dominant category are derived from a single taste cell, and that spikes assigned to the non-dominant category could be derived from up to three taste cells.
We inferred that two carbohydrates (e.g. glucose and inositol) stimulated the same taste cell within a sensillum if the neural responses met two conditions. First, the binary mixture of carbohydrates had to elicit significantly more dominant spikes than each carbohydrate alone. This would indicate that both carbohydrates were acting additively on one taste cell, causing it to fire more rapidly than either carbohydrate alone. Second, the binary mixture of carbohydrates had to elicit the same number of non-dominant spikes as each taste stimulus alone. This would indicate that the non-dominant spikes in each trace reflected the response to the electrolyte solution.
By contrast, we inferred that two carbohydrates (e.g. glucose and sucrose) stimulated different taste cells within a sensillum if the neural responses met a different set of conditions. First, the binary mixture of carbohydrates could not elicit significantly more dominant spikes than either carbohydrate alone. This would indicate (1) that the binary mixture of carbohydrates was not acting additively on a single taste cell, and (2) that the dominant spikes from the binary mixture reflected the response to one of the carbohydrates in the mixture (e.g. glucose). Second, the binary mixture of carbohydrates had to elicit significantly more non-dominant spikes than each carbohydrate alone. This would indicate that the non-dominant spikes from the binary mixture reflected the response to the second carbohydrate in the mixture (e.g. sucrose), whereas the non-dominant spikes from each of the carbohydrates reflected the response to the electrolyte solution.
Data analysis
We sought to determine how many carbohydrate-sensitive taste cells existed
in both the lateral and medial styloconic sensilla, and the response
properties of each of these taste cells. To this end, we measured the neural
response of the dominant and non-dominant taste cells, separately for each
taste stimulus (see above for details). For a given neural response, we
tallied the number of spikes that occurred across the initial 1000 ms of
stimulation. We used one-way RM-ANOVA to compare the number of dominant (or
non-dominant) spikes generated by each triad of taste stimuli (i.e. two
carbohydrates alone and in the binary mixture of both). If the ANOVA was
significant, then we ran a post-hoc test (Tukey's HSD test, adapted for a
within design). We used this information, together with a detailed analysis of
the neural traces (e.g. spike shape, amplitude and temporal pattern), to
ascertain which of the carbohydrates (i.e. sucrose, glucose and inositol)
stimulated the same or different taste cells within each taste sensillum.
Experiment 3: are two carbohydrates more effective than one at stimulating feeding?
We dissolved each carbohydrate in deionized water and then pipetted the
test solution onto a glass-fiber disk (Whatman GF/A, 4.25 cm diameter;
henceforth, `disk'). We presented the disk to the caterpillar immediately
after adding the test solution so as to reduce evaporative water loss and to
make the results comparable to the electrophysiological recordings. We used
the following test solutions (at room temperature): water alone, sucrose (200
mmol l–1), glucose (200 mmol l–1), inositol
(1 mmol l–1) and binary mixtures of each solution (i.e. 200
mmol l–1 sucrose plus 200 mmol l–1 glucose;
200 mmol l–1 sucrose plus 1 mmol l–1
inositol; and 200 mmol l–1 glucose plus 1 mmol
l–1 inositol). We selected the indicated concentration of
each carbohydrate because they were used in the previous experiment.
Behavioral test
We recorded the timing of all bites taken over the course of an entire
meal. Our biting test consisted of four steps. (1) We placed a caterpillar in
the `food-deprivation arena', which consisted of a clean (inverted) Petri dish
covered by a clear plastic cylinder (7.5 cm in diameter, 10 cm tall). We
fasted the caterpillar in this arena for 30 min to standardize its `hunger'
state. (2) Then, we transferred the caterpillar to the `test arena', which was
identical to the food-deprivation arena in all respects except that a piece of
cork (1 cm in diameter, 3–4 mm high) had been taped to the middle of the
inverted Petri dish. Immediately before each test session, we pinned a disk to
the piece of cork, and then moistened it with 400 ml of the test solution (see
above for details). (3) Next, we placed the caterpillar on the edge of the
glass-fiber disk, positioning it so that its legs and prolegs grasped the edge
of the glass-fiber disk securely. (4) Once the caterpillar had brought its
mouthparts into contact with the surface of the glass-fiber disk and appeared
to be tasting it (i.e. drumming the surface of the glass-fiber disk with its
chemosensilla), we began the biting test. To be included in the experiment,
the caterpillar had to initiate biting on the disk within 8 min of the
beginning of the trial. We recorded the timing of all bites until the `meal'
ended. We defined a `meal' as a period of relatively continuous biting, which
ended once the caterpillar ceased biting for 2 min
(Bowdan, 1988
). To determine
the amount of disk area eaten during the meal, we let the disks dry overnight
and used SigmaScan (SPSS, Chicago, IL, USA) to quantify the two-dimensional
area of disk (in mm2) that the caterpillar removed during its
meal.
We developed three procedures to ensure that the observer could record the timing of each bite easily, accurately and without bias. First, by positioning the test arena on a turntable-like device, we could rotate the caterpillar and keep its mandibles clearly visible as it fed (this rotation did not disrupt the feeding of the caterpillar). Second, we recorded the timing of each bite with a software-based event recorder; this was possible to do accurately because the caterpillars emitted bites at a relatively low frequency (0 to 3 Hz), and because their black mandibles contrasted with the white experimental disks. Third, we kept the observer blind to the identity of the carbohydrate solution in the experimental disk.
Data analysis
Each caterpillar was run through a single meal. We analyzed several
features of its biting response: (1) latency to initiate feeding (i.e. the
time that elapsed between initially tasting the surface of the disk and
initiating biting); (2) total number of bites exhibited during the initial 10
s, 120 s and then across the meal; (3) duration of the meal; (4) disk area
consumed (in mm2) across the meal; and (5) mean bite size (i.e.
disk area consumed divided by the total number of bites). For each biting
measure, we made comparisons across taste stimuli, using the
Kruskal–Wallis test and Dunn's multiple-comparison test. We used
nonparametric tests because the data were not normally distributed.
Finally, we determined the molar density of carbohydrates in each type of disk (i.e. moles of carbohydrate per mm2 of disk). Given that we applied 400 µl of test solution to each disk, and that the area of the disk (at the beginning of each test) was 1418.6 mm2, it follows that there was 0.282 µl of carbohydrate per mm2 of disk. Because we knew the molar concentration of carbohydrate in each test solution, we could determine the moles of carbohydrate in each mm2 of disk.
| Results |
|---|
|
|
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The medial styloconic sensillum responded to the carbohydrates with the following relative magnitude of response: inositol>glucose>sucrose=trehalose=fructose= maltose=Polycose=solvent alone (Fig. 2A). However, the lateral styloconic sensillum responded to the carbohydrates with different relative magnitudes of response: inositol=sucrose> glucose>fructose=Polycose=maltose=trehalose=solvent alone (Fig. 2B). Because inositol, sucrose and glucose were the only carbohydrates that elicited responses significantly greater than solvent alone (in at least one class of styloconic sensillum), we limited all subsequent experiments to these three carbohydrates.
|
We found that the neural responses of each taste sensillum to inositol, sucrose and glucose all increased significantly with concentration (for each concentration–response curve, P<0.05; one-way RM-ANOVA), but the magnitude of the response varied considerably across carbohydrates (Fig. 2C,D). The medial styloconic sensilla exhibited robust concentration-dependent increases in response to inositol, but only modest increases to glucose and sucrose. By contrast, the lateral styloconic sensilla exhibited robust concentration-dependent increases in response to inositol and sucrose, but a modest increase to glucose. The most notable difference between the lateral and medial styloconic sensilla concerned the sucrose response – e.g. 200 mmol l–1 sucrose elicited an excitatory response of approximately 75 spikes s–1 in the lateral, but only 8 spikes s–1 in the medial styloconic sensillum.
Experiment 2: what are the response properties of each class of carbohydrate-sensitive taste cell?
According to Schoonhoven (Schoonhoven,
1972
), the lateral styloconic sensillum of M. sexta
contains one taste cell that responds to sucrose and glucose, and another
taste cell that responds to inositol. The medial styloconic sensillum, on the
other hand, contains one taste cell that responds to glucose and another that
responds to inositol. Here, we assessed this peripheral organizational
plan.
Response to sucrose and inositol (lateral styloconica)
We examined the neural response of the carbohydrate-sensitive taste cells
in the lateral styloconic sensillum to sucrose (200 mmol
l–1), inositol (1 mmol l–1) and
sucrose+inositol. We found that the binary mixture elicited the same number of
dominant spikes as sucrose, but significantly more dominant spikes than
glucose (Fig. 3B). By contrast,
the binary mixture elicited significantly more non-dominant spikes than
sucrose or glucose alone (Fig.
3C). These results, together with analyses of the neural traces
(e.g. see Fig. 3A) and temporal
patterns of discharge (Fig.
7B,C), indicate (1) that sucrose caused one taste cell to generate
a tonic discharge pattern, (2) that inositol caused one taste cell to generate
a phasic-tonic discharge pattern, and (3) that the binary mixture of
sucrose+inositol caused two taste cells to discharge out-of-phase with one
another (one taste cell exhibited a tonic discharge pattern, and the other
elicited a phasic-tonic discharge pattern). Based on these findings, we
propose that sucrose and inositol each activated different
carbohydrate-sensitive taste cells within the lateral styloconic
sensillum.
|
70 dominant spikes s–1 and
45 non-dominant spikes
s–1 (Fig.
3B,C). This was not the case, however. We measured
70
dominant spikes s–1, but
25 non-dominant spikes
s–1. The low number of non-dominant spikes indicates that
inhibitory interactions occurred between the two carbohydrate-sensitive taste
cells.
Response to sucrose and glucose (lateral styloconica)
Next, we examined the neural response of the carbohydrate-sensitive taste
cells in the lateral styloconic sensillum to sucrose (200 mmol
l–1), glucose (1 mmol l–1) and
sucrose+glucose. We found that the binary mixture elicited the same number of
dominant spikes as sucrose, but significantly more than glucose
(Fig. 4B). By contrast, the
binary mixture elicited significantly more non-dominant spikes than did either
component alone (Fig. 4C).
These findings, together with analyses of the neural traces (e.g. see
Fig. 4A) and temporal patterns
of discharge (Fig. 7B,C),
indicate (1) that sucrose caused one taste cell to generate a tonic discharge
pattern, (2) that glucose caused one taste cell to generate a phasic-tonic
discharge pattern, and (3) that the binary mixture of both carbohydrates
caused two taste cells to discharge out-of-phase with one another (one taste
cell exhibited a tonic discharge pattern, and another a phasic-tonic discharge
pattern). Based on these findings, we propose that sucrose and glucose each
activated different carbohydrate-sensitive taste cells in the lateral
styloconic sensillum.
If the carbohydrate-sensitive taste cells functioned independently of one
another, then the binary mixture of sucrose+glucose should have elicited
70 dominant and
40 non-dominant spikes s–1
(Fig. 4B,C). Our results
roughly match this prediction, indicating that the two carbohydrate-sensitive
taste cells functioned independently of one another when stimulated by the
mixture of sucrose and glucose.
Response to glucose and inositol (lateral styloconica)
We examined the neural response of the carbohydrate-sensitive taste cells
in the lateral styloconic sensillum to glucose (200 mmol
l–1), inositol (1 mmol l–1) and
glucose+inositol. We found that the binary mixture elicited significantly more
dominant spikes than did glucose or inositol alone
(Fig. 5B). By contrast, the
binary mixture elicited the same number of non-dominant spikes as glucose or
inositol alone (Fig. 5C). These
results, together with analyses of the neural traces
(Fig. 5A) and temporal patterns
of discharge (Fig. 7B),
indicate that the glucose, inositol and glucose+inositol solutions each caused
a single taste cell to generate similar phasic-tonic discharge patterns. The
only difference between these discharge patterns was that the binary mixture
elicited a higher rate of firing across the entire 1000 ms of response. Based
on these findings, we infer that inositol, glucose and the binary mixture each
activated the same carbohydrate-sensitive taste cell in the lateral styloconic
sensillum.
|
If glucose and inositol each acted independently on the same
carbohydrate-sensitive taste cell, then the binary mixture of glucose+inositol
should have elicited
85 dominant spikes s–1
(Fig. 5B). Instead, we observed
65 dominant spikes s–1. This indicates that inhibitory
interactions occurred between glucose and inositol.
Response to glucose and inositol (medial styloconica)
We also examined the neural response of the carbohydrate-sensitive taste
cells in the medial styloconic sensillum to glucose (200 mmol
l–1), inositol (1 mmol l–1) and
glucose+inositol. We found that the glucose+inositol solution elicited
significantly more dominant spikes than did the glucose or inositol solution
(Fig. 6B). Further, the
glucose, inositol and glucose+inositol solutions each elicited a low and
statistically equivalent number of non-dominant spikes
(Fig. 6C). These findings,
together with analyses of the neural traces
(Fig. 6A) and temporal patterns
of discharge (Fig. 7A),
indicate that the glucose, inositol and glucose+inositol solutions each caused
a single taste cell to generate a phasic-tonic discharge pattern. Based on
these findings, we propose that inositol, glucose and the binary mixture each
activated the same carbohydrate-sensitive taste cell in the medial styloconic
sensillum.
|
105 dominant spikes s–1
(Fig. 6B). This was
approximately what we observed, indicating that no inhibitory interactions
occurred between glucose and inositol in the medial styloconic sensilla.
Response to sucrose (medial styloconica)
We asked whether sucrose stimulates the same carbohydrate-sensitive taste
cell as glucose or inositol in the medial styloconic sensillum. We could not
answer this question, however, because the neural response to 200 mmol
l–1 sucrose was indistinguishable from that to the
electrolyte solution.
Taken together, these results show that the carbohydrate solutions (i.e. sucrose, glucose, inositol and the three binary mixtures) activated different populations of carbohydrate-sensitive taste cells. Whereas sucrose activated one class of taste cell in the lateral styloconic sensillum, glucose+inositol both activated another taste cell in both the lateral and medial styloconic sensillum.
Experiment 3: are two carbohydrates more effective than one at stimulating feeding?
In many species of mammal (Spector,
2000
) and insect (Ma,
1972
; Blaney, 1975
;
Dethier, 1976
;
Scheiner et al., 2001
;
Omura and Honda, 2003
;
Wang et al., 2004
;
Sasaki and Asaoka, 2006
), the
presence of single carbohydrates elicits an immediate concentration-dependent
increase in feeding responsiveness. Previous work in M. sexta
revealed a paradoxical effect of carbohydrates on feeding, however. Although
carbohdyrates appear to have a limited (or non-existent) effect on immediate
biting responses (Bowdan,
1995
; Glendinning et al.,
2000
), they nevertheless stimulate intake in long-term feeding
studies (Yamamoto and Fraenkel,
1960
; Städler and Hanson,
1978
; Glendinning et al.,
2000
).
Here, we addressed three inter-related issues. First, we attempted to
explain the discrepancy between the results from short- and long-term feeding
tests. To this end, we tested the hypothesis [derived from a study of the
terrestrial slug, Limax maximus
(Reingold and Gelperin, 1980
)]
that carbohydrates stimulate intake by causing M. sexta to bite for
more extended periods of time, without increasing biting rate or bite size. We
defined feeding stimulation as biting activity greater than that elicited by
water alone. Second, we compared the ability of different carbohydrates (alone
or in binary mixture) to stimulate feeding. Third, we tested two hypotheses to
explain why some carbohydrate solutions stimulated larger meals. If meal size
is determined by negative feedback from the midgut or hemolymph [owing to the
accumulation of nutrients or osmotically active compounds
(Simpson and Raubenheimer,
1993
; Timmins and Reynolds,
1992
)], then meal size should decrease with increasing molar
density of nutrients in the ingested food. Alternatively, if meal size is
determined by excitatory input from carbohydrate-sensitive taste cells, then
meal size should increase with (a) the total number of spikes elicited across
all carbohydrate-sensitive taste cells, or (b) the number of different classes
of carbohydrate-sensitive taste cell that are activated.
Behavioral tests
When presented with a water-treated disk, the caterpillars took
approximately 12 s to initiate biting, but when presented with any of the
carbohydrate-treated disks, they took significantly less time (2–3 s) to
initiate biting (K–W statistic=26.0; P
0.05;
Fig. 8A). All of the
carbohydrate solutions, however, were equally effective at reducing the
latency to initiate biting.
|
0.05; Fig. 9B)
and meal duration (K–W statistic=26.4; P
0.05;
Fig. 9C). A post-hoc analysis
revealed that despite a trend for all carbohydrate solutions to stimulate
feeding, only two carbohydrate solutions, sucrose+glucose and
sucrose+inositol, caused the caterpillars to take significantly larger meals
than water alone. These findings show that specific mixtures of carbohydrates
are required to stimulate feeding, and that these mixtures do so by increasing
the amount of time spent biting.
|
|
This second hypothesis was that excitatory input from the carbohydrate-sensitive taste cells determined meal size. We examined two possible mechanisms by which this could occur. One is that the insect's brain monitors excitatory input from all carbohydrate-sensitive taste cells, and increases meal size in direct proportion to the algebraic sum of this afferent input. To test this possibility, we regressed meal size on the total number of spikes s–1 elicited by each carbohydrate solution (Table 1). This regression was not significant (slope=0.3; r2=0.003; F1,4=0.02; P>0.05), indicating that meal size varied independently of total excitatory input. A second mechanism is that the insect's brain monitors the pattern of activity across the three classes of carbohydrate-sensitive taste cell (rather than total excitatory input per se), and generates the largest meal when all three classes of carbohydrate-sensitive taste cell are activated strongly. We found clear support for this latter mechanism. Even though the glucose+inositol solution elicited a high total firing rate (166 spikes s–1), it activated only two carbohydrate-sensitive taste cells and failed to generate meals larger than those on water alone (Table 1, Fig. 9B). By contrast, the two other binary mixtures (sucrose+inositol and sucrose+glucose) each elicited an intermediate firing rate (i.e. 126–154 spikes s–1), but nevertheless activated three carbohydrate-sensitive taste cells and caused the caterpillars to take meals significantly larger than those on water alone. In fact, the meals on the sucrose+inositol disks were significantly larger than those on the glucose+inositol disks.
| Discussion |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Although several reports have shown that taste cells within the lateral
and/or medial sensilla of M. sexta exhibit excitatory responses to
sucrose, glucose and/or inositol (Frazier,
1986
; Lam and Frazier,
1991
; Gothilf and Hanson,
1994
; Glendinning et al.,
2000
; Schoonhoven and van
Loon, 2002
), we are aware of only one systematic attempt to
determine the response properties of each carbohydrate-sensitive taste cell
– it was performed by Schoonhoven and Dethier
(Schoonhoven and Dethier,
1966
). These authors examined representative neural responses of
the lateral and medial styloconic sensilla to binary mixtures of
carbohydrates. For instance, they show a response of the lateral (their
fig. 4, trace 12) and medial
(their fig. 3, trace 9)
styloconic sensilla to a binary mixture of glucose (100 mmol
l–1) and inositol (100 mmol l–1); the traces
appear to illustrate a single taste cell firing rapidly. In addition, the
authors show a response of the lateral styloconic sensilla to a binary mixture
of sucrose (100 mmol l–1) and glucose (100 mmol
l–1) (their fig.
3, trace 11); the trace appears to illustrate two taste cells
firing out-of-phase with one another. These findings corroborate the more
extensive results presented herein, and lead us to conclude that (1) each
lateral styloconic sensillum contains one carbohydrate-sensitive taste cell
that responds to sucrose and another that responds to glucose and inositol;
whereas (2) each medial styloconic sensilla contains a single
carbohydrate-sensitive taste cell, which responds to glucose and inositol.
In a comprehensive review of caterpillar taste, Schoonhoven and van Loon
reported that many species possess taste cells that respond exclusively to
sucrose or inositol, but they did not cite any species with taste cells that
respond both to glucose and inositol
(Schoonhoven and van Loon,
2002
). It would appear, therefore, that the presence of a
sucrose-sensitive taste cell is common among caterpillars, but that the
presence of glucose/inositol-sensitive taste cells is unusual.
How do carbohydrates modulate feeding in M. sexta?
Our behavioral studies offer several insights into how gustatory input from
the carbohydrate-sensitive taste cells modulate feeding in M. sexta.
First, the fact that all of the carbohydrate solutions significantly reduced
the latency to initiate biting (as compared with water) demonstrates that
carbohydrates can incite feeding. It is notable, however, that there were no
significant differences in latency to initiate biting across the different
carbohydrate solutions. This may reflect the fact that we used relatively high
concentrations of most carbohydrates (e.g. 200 mmol l–1
glucose). In support of this possibility, we reported previously that a lower
concentration of glucose (100 mmol l–1) did not reduce the
latency to initiate biting (Glendinning et
al., 2000
). Given that 200 mmol l–1 glucose
generates a substantially stronger peripheral gustatory response than 100 mmol
l–1 glucose (Fig.
2), it would appear that there is a threshold level of input from
the carbohydrate-sensitive taste cells required to incite feeding, and that
input from 200 mmol l–1 glucose (and the other carbohydrate
solutions tested herein) surpassed this threshold.
In many species of insect, the taste of sugars stimulates
concentration-dependent increases in feeding. For instance, increasing the
concentration of sucrose will cause a proportional increase in (1) the
strength of the swallowing response in Bombyx mori caterpillars
(Sasaki and Asaoka, 2006
); (2)
the rate of biting in Pieris brassicae caterpillars
(Ma, 1972
); and (3) the
probability that flies and bees will extend their proboscis
(Dethier, 1976
;
Scheiner et al., 2001
) and
butterflies will initiate feeding (Omura
and Honda, 2003
). Based on these findings, it is surprising that
M. sexta caterpillars emitted the same initial rate of biting on
disks treated with water as on disks treated with high concentrations of
carbohydrates, both here and elsewhere
(Bowdan, 1995
;
Glendinning et al., 2000
).
Even though Bowdan reported that M. sexta caterpillars tend to bite
more avidly from disks treated with 100 mmol l–1 than 10 mmol
l–1 sucrose during the first chewing bout
(Bowdan, 1995
), the median
number of bites on each type of disk did not differ significantly
(Mann–Whitney U-test, P>0.05).
We found that only two of the carbohydrate solutions (sucrose+inositol and
sucrose+glucose) significantly increased meal size, relative to water. To
explain this observation, we asked whether meal lengths on the different
carbohydrate solutions correlated with differences in the (1) amount of
postingestive feedback, (2) magnitude of the total peripheral response, or (3)
number of activated carbohydrate-sensitive taste cells. Our analysis indicated
that meal length correlated with differences in the number of activated
carbohydrate-sensitive taste cells, but not with the other two measures. This
leads us to propose that meal length on the carbohydrate-treated disks was not
modulated by the algebraic sum of inputs from the carbohydrate-sensitive taste
cells (Schoonhoven and Blom,
1988
) or the accumulation of carbohydrates in the mid-gut or
hemolymph (Timmins and Reynolds,
1992
; Simpson and
Raubenheimer, 1993
).
Insects use several coding mechanisms to identify and discriminate taste
stimuli, including labeled-line (Marella
et al., 2006
), temporal
(Glendinning et al., 2006
) and
ensemble (Dethier and Crnjar,
1982
; Glendinning et al.,
2002
) codes. Our findings indicate that M. sexta
identifies preferred foods based on an ensemble code – i.e. the pattern
of activity generated across the entire population of carbohydrate-sensitive
taste cells. Accordingly, the ensemble code for a preferred carbohydrate-rich
food would be strong and simultaneous activation of all three classes of
carbohydrate-sensitive taste cell. A crucial prediction of this coding
mechanism is that those carbohydrate solutions that activate only one or two
pairs of carbohydrate-sensitive taste should fail to stimulate feeding,
irrespective of the magnitude of the peripheral taste response. We found clear
support for this prediction. For instance, even though the mixture of
glucose+inositol elicited a vigorous peripheral gustatory response (i.e. 166
spikes s–1), the spikes were limited to two classes of
carbohydrate-sensitive taste cell and the caterpillars failed to exhibit
significant feeding stimulation (Table
1, Fig. 9).
However, the mixture of sucrose+inositol elicited a comparable peripheral
response (i.e. 154 spikes s–1), but activated all three
classes of carbohydrate-sensitive taste cell and stimulated significantly
larger meals than water alone.
Caveats
There are three interpretive limitations of our study. The first is that we
are relating taste cell responses that span 1 s to biting responses that span
several minutes. As we illustrate in Fig.
7, adaptation processes can cause large reductions in the absolute
firing rates of taste cells over periods as short as 1 s. Before we can
address this caveat, however, we need to determine the temporal pattern of
stimulation that taste cells experience over the course of the meal. This is
because caterpillars repeatedly retract their styloconic sensilla from the
surface of food items as they are feeding
(Devitt and Smith, 1985
).
Whenever a sensillum is retracted, the taste cells contained within it should
experience partial or complete disadaptation
(Blaney, 1975
). If so, then our
1 s neural responses would accurately reflect what caterpillars experienced
over the course of a meal.
The second interpretive limitation is that we focused on the first meal,
and ignored consumption across successive meals. We did so to maximize our
chances of measuring taste-mediated feeding responses. It is notable, however,
that both sucrose and inositol alone have been reported to stimulate feeding
in M. sexta during feeding tests that span several hours
(Yamamoto and Fraenkel, 1960
;
Städler and Hanson, 1978
;
Glendinning et al., 2000
). We
can propose two non-mutually exclusive explanations for the discrepancy
between the results of these protracted feeding tests and the one presented
herein. First, in the present study, there was a trend for sucrose and
inositol to stimulate feeding, but the difference was not significant. It is
possible that the feeding stimulation would have become significant had we
performed the test over a longer period of time. Second, it is possible that
post-oral response mechanisms indirectly stimulate feeding during long-term
intake tests. This possibility is based on the observation that the positive
postingestive actions of carbohydrates alone can stimulate robust intake in
mammals (Sclafani, 2001
;
Sclafani and Glendinning,
2005
).
The third interpretive limitation of our study is that the sucrose+glucose mixture contained both 200 mmol l–1 sucrose and 200 mmol l–1 glucose. Thus, it is possible that the peripheral gustatory response to this binary mixture differed from that to each carbohydrate alone simply because it contained 400 mmol l–1 of total sugar. This possibility is contradicted, however, by the observation that the neural response of the lateral styloconic sensillum to 200 mmol l–1 sucrose (or glucose) is indistinguishable from that to 400 mmol l–1 sucrose (or glucose) (J.I.G., unpublished data). That is, each carbohydrate strongly activates one dominant taste cell at both the 200 and 400 mmol l–1 concentrations.
Interactions among taste cells within the same sensillum
Previous studies have reported that when insect taste sensilla are
stimulated with taste stimulus mixtures, the discharge rate is often less than
the sum of the discharge rates from the individual component stimuli. These
inhibitory interactions involve stimulus mixtures that activate different
taste cells within the same sensillum
(Ishikawa, 1967
;
Schoonhoven, 1978
;
Mitchell, 1987
;
Blaney and Simmonds, 1990
;
White et al., 1990
;
Chapman et al., 1991
;
Schoonhoven et al., 1992
;
Shields and Mitchell, 1995
;
Bernays and Chapman, 2000
;
Glendinning et al., 2000
;
Bernays and Chapman, 2001
) or
different signaling pathways within the same taste cell
(Glendinning and Hills, 1997
).
Here, we report similar findings. For example, despite activating different
taste cells within the lateral sensillum, one of the binary mixtures (i.e.
inositol+sucrose) elicited fewer non-dominant spikes than would have been
predicted based on the firing rate elicited by the individual component
stimuli (Fig. 3). This
indicates that inhibitory interactions occurred between the two
carbohydrate-sensitive taste cells. Likewise, despite activating the same
taste cell, the glucose+inositol mixture elicited fewer dominant spikes in the
lateral styloconic sensillum than expected based on the response to each
carbohydrate alone (Fig. 5).
This indicates that the inhibitory interactions also occurred within the same
taste cell.
The mechanistic bases for inhibitory mixture interactions in the lateral
sensillum are unclear. For these interactions to occur between taste cells,
there could be direct electrical communication via gap junctions
(Steinbrecht, 1989
;
Isidoro et al., 1993
) or
ephaptic interactions among adjacent taste cells
(Jefferys, 1995
;
Bokil et al., 2001
). For
inhibitory interactions to occur between taste stimuli that activate the same
taste cell, there could be antagonistic interactions at the cell-surface
receptor. Alternatively, if the two carbohydrates activate different signaling
pathways, then activation of one pathway could inhibit the response of the
other (Dethier and Bowdan,
1989
).
Functional implications
There are at least two reasons why M. sexta should benefit from
feeding selectively on leaves containing mixtures of sucrose+inositol (or
sucrose+glucose). Whereas many plant tissues contain relatively high
concentrations of glucose and low concentrations of sucrose
(Somogyi and Trautner, 1974
),
solanacous plants contain roughly equal concentrations of glucose and sucrose,
and relatively high concentrations of inositol
(Nelson and Bernays, 1998
).
Thus, M. sexta could use the simultaneous activation of all three
classes of carbohydrate-sensitive taste cell as a sign stimulus for its
solanacous host plants. A second reason is that high carbohydrate consumption
increases fat accumulation in both the larval
(Thompson et al., 2003
) and
adult (Ojeda-Avila et al.,
2003
) stages. This extra fat would help pupae undergo successful
metamorphosis and adults fuel flight when nectar reserves are limited
(Ziegler and Schultz, 1986
).
Given that carbohydrate levels vary greatly among leaves within solanacous
plants (Nelson and Bernays,
1998
), any gustatory mechanism that helps M. sexta
identify leaves with relatively high concentrations of several carbohydrates
(i.e. sucrose, glucose and inositol) should promote fat accumulation, and thus
be adaptive.
Future directions
We found that a specific ensemble code from the peripheral taste system
(i.e. activation of all three classes of carbohydrate-sensitive taste cell)
was necessary to stimulate feeding in M. sexta. This ensemble code
increased the duration of biting, but had no effect on bite size or the rate
at which bites were emitted. Further work is needed to determine the
mechanisms by which the ensemble code increases meal length. They could
involve raising the insect's central excitatory state at the onset of the
meal, or delaying activation of the mechanisms that terminate feeding.
Additional work should attempt to identify other ecologically relevant
situations that enhance behavioral responsiveness to carbohydrates. For
instance, synergistic interactions could occur between gustatory input from
carbohydrates and host plant chemicals. This is based on the observation that
rearing M. sexta on their host plants (e.g. tomato, potato or tobacco
leaves) induces a strong preference for leaf disks treated with host plant
extracts (Hanson and Dethier,
1973
; de Boer,
1993
; del Campo et al.,
2001
; del Campo and Miles,
2003
; Haribal et al.,
2006
). Another possibility is that taste-mediated responsiveness
to carbohydrates increases following starvation or prolonged consumption of a
carbohydrate-deficient diet. If so, then this elevated responsiveness would
facilitate the re-establishment of normal blood sugar levels. The existence of
such a mechanism is supported by the observation that maintaining M.
sexta on a carbohydrate-deficient diet for 24 h causes them to prefer a
carbohydrate-rich diet over a carbohydrate-deficient diet
(Thompson and Redak, 2000
).
This deprivation-induced preference for carbohydrates could be mediated by
enhanced peripheral (Simpson et al.,
1990
; Simmonds et al.,
1992
) or central taste responsiveness.
| Acknowledgments |
|---|
| References |
|---|
|
|
|---|
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