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.2020 Jan 24;15(1):e0228171.
doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0228171. eCollection 2020.

Sugar, amino acid and inorganic ion profiling of the honeydew from different hemipteran species feeding on Abies alba and Picea abies

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Sugar, amino acid and inorganic ion profiling of the honeydew from different hemipteran species feeding on Abies alba and Picea abies

Basel Shaaban et al. PLoS One..

Abstract

Several hemipteran species feed on the phloem sap of plants and produce large amounts of honeydew that is collected by bees to produce honeydew honey. Therefore, it is important to know whether it is predominantly the hemipteran species or the host plant to influence the honeydew composition. This is particularly relevant for those botanical and zoological species from which the majority of honeydew honey originates. To investigate this issue, honeydew from two Cinara species located on Abies alba as well as from two Cinara and two Physokermes species located on Picea abies were collected. Phloem exudates of the host plants were also analyzed. Honeydew of all species contained different proportions of hexoses, sucrose, melezitose, erlose, and further di- and trisaccharides, whereas the phloem exudates of the host trees contained no trisaccharides. Moreover, the proportions of sugars differed significantly between hemipteran species feeding on the same tree species. Sucrose hydrolysis and oligosaccharide formation was shown in whole-body homogenates of aphids. The type of the produced oligosaccharides in the aphid-extracts correlated with the oligosaccharide composition in the honeydew of the different aphid species. The total contents of amino acids and inorganic ions in the honeydew were much lower than the sugar content. Glutamine and glutamate were predominant amino acids in the honeydew of all six hemipteran species and also in the phloem exudates of both tree species. Potassium was the dominant inorganic ion in all honeydew samples and also in the phloem exudate. Statistical analyses reveal that the sugar composition of honeydew is determined more by the hemipteran species than by the host plant. Consequently, it can be assumed that the sugar composition of honeydew honey is also more influenced by the hemipteran species than by the host tree.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.

Figures

Fig 1
Fig 1. Melezitose and erlose proportion in the honeydew of six hemipteran species feeding onA.alba andP.abies.
All values are mean proportions (%) of n = 15 independent measurements ± SD. Data were taken from Table 1. Different letters represent significant differences in melezitose and erlose proportion between different hemipteran species (Tukey’s HSD;p < 0.05).
Fig 2
Fig 2. Amino acids in phloem exudate and honeydew, each expressed as percentage of the total amino acid concentration.
Cinara species feeding onA.alba,Cinara species feeding onP.abies, andPhysokermes species feeding onP.abies. The data show means across both species of a hemipteran genus feeding on the same tree species for the proportion of amino acids in honeydew (data from Table 2). Grey squares: non-essential amino acids, black circles: essential amino acids, white triangles: other organic amino compounds. Points with the highest orthogonal distance to the bisecting line were noted.
Fig 3
Fig 3. Inorganic ions in phloem exudate and honeydew, each expressed as percentage of the total inorganic ion concentration.
Cinara species feeding onA.alba,Cinara species feeding onP.abies, andPhysokermes species feeding onP.abies. The data show means across both species of a hemipteran genus feeding on the same tree species for the proportion of inorganic ions in honeydew (data from Table 3). Points with the highest orthogonal distance to the bisecting line were noted. Grey squares: cations, black circles: anions.
Fig 4
Fig 4. Scatterplots and loadings of NMDS.
(A,C,E) Scatterplots of NMCS for (A) sugars, (C) amino acids, and (E) inorganic ions (stress values A = 0.18 C = 0.19, E = 0.19). Samples of each of the hemipteran species are connected with the centroids of the corresponding convex hulls using the function ‘ordispider’ (package Vegan). (B,D,F) Loading plots, which illustrate the original variables (B sugars, D amino acids, F inorganic ions) loaded as vectors in NMDS space. The analyses are based on the proportions of sugars, amino acids, and inorganic ions in honeydew.
Fig 5
Fig 5. Sugar formation in whole-body homogenates ofC.pectinatae andC.pilicornis.
The aphid homogenates were incubated with 10% sucrose solution. All values are means of n = 3 independent measurements ± SD. Mann-Whitney U tests comparing means of each sugar production rate between differentCinara species (*p < 0.05) were performed.
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