Metabolic consequences of various fruit-based diets in a generalist insect species

Author:

Olazcuaga Laure12ORCID,Baltenweck Raymonde3ORCID,Leménager Nicolas1,Maia-Grondard Alessandra3,Claudel Patricia3,Hugueney Philippe3,Foucaud Julien1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. UMR CBGP (INRAE-IRD-CIRAD, Montpellier SupAgro), Campus International de Baillarguet

2. Department of Agricultural Biology, Colorado State University

3. Université de Strasbourg, INRAE

Abstract

Most phytophagous insect species exhibit a limited diet breadth and specialize on a few or a single host plant. In contrast, some species display a remarkably large diet breadth, with host plants spanning several families and many species. It is unclear, however, whether this phylogenetic generalism is supported by a generic metabolic use of common host chemical compounds (‘metabolic generalism’) or alternatively by distinct uses of diet-specific compounds (‘multi-host metabolic specialism’)? Here, we simultaneously investigated the metabolomes of fruit diets and of individuals of a generalist phytophagous species, Drosophila suzukii, that developed on them. The direct comparison of metabolomes of diets and consumers enabled us to disentangle the metabolic fate of common and rarer dietary compounds. We showed that the consumption of biochemically dissimilar diets resulted in a canalized, generic response from generalist individuals, consistent with the metabolic generalism hypothesis. We also showed that many diet-specific metabolites, such as those related to the particular color, odor, or taste of diets, were not metabolized, and rather accumulated in consumer individuals, even when probably detrimental to fitness. As a result, while individuals were mostly similar across diets, the detection of their particular diet was straightforward. Our study thus supports the view that dietary generalism may emerge from a passive, opportunistic use of various resources, contrary to more widespread views of an active role of adaptation in this process. Such a passive stance towards dietary chemicals, probably costly in the short term, might favor the later evolution of new diet specializations.

Funder

European Regional Development Fund

INRAE scientific department SPE

National Science Foundation

INRAE, France's National Research Institute for Agriculture, Food and Environment

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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