senecionine has been researched along with retronecine* in 3 studies
3 other study(ies) available for senecionine and retronecine
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Feeding on Host Plants with Different Concentrations and Structures of Pyrrolizidine Alkaloids Impacts the Chemical-Defense Effectiveness of a Specialist Herbivore.
Sequestration of chemical defenses from host plants is a strategy widely used by herbivorous insects to avoid predation. Larvae of the arctiine moth Utetheisa ornatrix feeding on unripe seeds and leaves of many species of Crotalaria (Leguminosae) sequester N-oxides of pyrrolizidine alkaloids (PAs) from these host plants, and transfer them to adults through the pupal stage. PAs confer protection against predation on all life stages of U. ornatrix. As U. ornatrix also uses other Crotalaria species as host plants, we evaluated whether the PA chemical defense against predation is independent of host plant use. We fed larvae from hatching to pupation with either leaves or seeds of one of eight Crotalaria species (C. incana, C. juncea, C. micans, C. ochroleuca, C. pallida, C. paulina, C. spectabilis, and C. vitellina), and tested if adults were preyed upon or released by the orb-weaving spider Nephila clavipes. We found that the protection against the spider was more effective in adults whose larvae fed on seeds, which had a higher PA concentration than leaves. The exceptions were adults from larvae fed on C. paulina, C. spectabilis and C. vitellina leaves, which showed high PA concentrations. With respect to the PA profile, we describe for the first time insect-PAs in U. ornatrix. These PAs, biosynthesized from the necine base retronecine of plant origin, or monocrotaline- and senecionine-type PAs sequestered from host plants, were equally active in moth chemical defense, in a dose-dependent manner. These results are also partially explained by host plant phylogeny, since PAs of the host plants do have a phylogenetic signal (clades with high and low PA concentrations in leaves) which is reflected in the adult defense. Topics: Animals; Biotransformation; Crotalaria; Feeding Behavior; Female; Herbivory; Larva; Male; Monocrotaline; Moths; Phylogeny; Plant Leaves; Plant Nectar; Predatory Behavior; Pyrrolizidine Alkaloids; Seeds; Spiders | 2015 |
In vivo covalent binding of retronecine-labelled [3H]seneciphylline and [3H]senecionine to DNA of rat liver, lung and kidney.
Retronecine-labelled [3H]seneciphylline ([3H]SPH) and [3H]senecionine ([3H]SON) of high specific radioactivity (22 and 49 mCi/mmol, respectively) were prepared biosynthetically with seedlings of Senecio vulgaris L. using [2,3-3H]putrescine as precursor. [2,3-3H]Putrescine was synthesized by Gabriel synthesis of 1,4-diamino-2-butene from 1,4-dibromo-2-butene and catalytic hydrogenation of the product with tritium gas. Rats of both sexes were treated with the labelled pyrrolizidine alkaloids (PAs) (75-215 microCi SPH or 40-485 microCi SON/kg body wt.) and killed after 6 h or 4-5 days. SON-treated females excreted 83.4 +/- 0.2% of applied radioactivity in faeces and urine within 4 days whereas equally treated males excreted 90.9 +/- 3.2% in the same time. Excretion of 3H-activity from SPH-treated females was completed within 5 days (104.7 +/- 6.4%). Corresponding with these results, tissue levels were highest in SON-treated females. DNA and proteins were isolated from liver, lungs and kidneys and covalent binding of the alkaloids to DNA was determined. A Covalent Binding Index (CBI, mumol alkaloid bound per mol nucleotides/mmol alkaloid administered per kg body wt.) of 210 +/- 12 was found for the liver from SON-treated females whereas binding to liver DNA of males was lower by a factor of 4. The DNA damage determined six hours after treatment persisted during the following 4 days. Administration of [3H]SPH to female and male rats resulted in a CBI of 69 +/- 7 and 73/92, respectively, for the liver DNA. Furthermore we found binding of both alkaloids to DNA of lungs and kidneys in male and female rats. The in vivo formation of [3H]SON derived DNA adducts could be proved by HPLC analysis of hydrolyzed DNA. Topics: Animals; Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid; DNA; Female; Kidney; Liver; Lung; Male; Pyrrolizidine Alkaloids; Rats; Tissue Distribution | 1985 |
Transfer of [3H]pyrrolizidine alkaloids from Senecio vulgaris L. and metabolites into rat milk and tissues.
[3H]Retronecine and [3H]necic acid-labelled senecionine and seneciphylline were prepared biosynthetically with seedlings of Senecio vulgaris L. using [2,3-3H]putrescine and [4,5-3H]isoleucine, respectively, as precursors. Lactating rats dosed with these differently labelled pyrrolizidine alkaloids (PAs) excreted within 3 h approx. 0.08% of the applied radioactivity in the milk mainly as yet not identified water-soluble retronecine-derived metabolites and with approx. 0.02% as unchanged PAs. Highest tissue levels of PAs and metabolites, 6 h after administration, were found in liver and lungs. Topics: Animals; Dicarboxylic Acids; Female; Kinetics; Milk; Plants, Toxic; Pregnancy; Pyrrolizidine Alkaloids; Rats; Senecio; Tissue Distribution; Tritium | 1983 |