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Cantharidin production in a blister beetle
Authors:J. E. Carrel  M. H. McCairel  A. J. Slagle  J. P. Doom  J. Brill  J. P. McCormick
Affiliation:(1) Division of Biological Sciences and Department of Chemistry, University of Missouri, 65211 Columbia, Missouri, USA
Abstract:Cantharidin, a potent defensive chemical, is present in all ten life stages of the blister beetleEpicauta funebris. The first five larval stages accumulate cantharidin as they feed and grow in size. When disturbed, they exude cantharidin in a milky oral fluid, not in hemolymph which adult beetles reflexively discharge from leg joints. Two subsequent larval stages and the pupa do not feed, grow, regurgitate, or change in their defensive reserves (110 mgrg cantharidin/insect, regardless of sex). Adult beetles kept in isolation for 60–90 d exhibit a pronounced sexual dimorphism in cantharidin production: the male biosynthesizes about 17 mg of the toxin, representing 10% of his live weight, whereas the female actually loses most of her defensive reserves. But in the wild a female beetle repeatedly acquires cantharidin as copulatory gifts from her mates.This study was supported by Grant DK 31186 and by the University of Missouri Institutional Biomedical Research Support Grant RR07053, both from the National Institutes of Health.
Keywords:Coleoptera  Meloidae  Epicauta funebris  chemical defense  biosynthesis  terpenoid
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