4.5 Article

Odor Coding in a Disease-Transmitting Herbivorous Insect, the Asian Citrus Psyllid

Journal

CHEMICAL SENSES
Volume 39, Issue 6, Pages 539-549

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/chemse/bju023

Keywords

Asian citrus psyllid; antenna; herbivore insect; odorants

Funding

  1. Citrus Research Board [5500-186]

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Olfactory systems discriminate odorants very efficiently and herbivorous insects use them to find hosts in confounding and complex odor landscapes. The Asian citrus psyllid (ACP), Diaphorina citri, feeds on citrus flush and transmits Candidatus Liberibacter that causes citrus greening disease globally. Here, we perform a systematic analysis of odor detection in the ACP antenna using single-unit electrophysiology of rhinarial plate sensilla to a large panel of odorants from plants. We identify neurons that respond strongly to odorants found in the host citrus plants. Comparisons with the generalist yeast-feeding Drosophila melanogaster and specialist anthropophilic Anopheles gambiae reveal differences in odor-coding strategies for the citrus-seeking ACP. These findings provide a foundation for understanding host-odor coding in herbivorous insects.

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