生物
信息素
性信息素
嗅觉感受器
进化生物学
昆虫
嗅觉
受体
致电离效应
化学生态学
化学通讯
神经科学
生态学
动物
遗传学
NMDA受体
标识
DOI:10.1146/annurev-ento-121423-013351
摘要
Fabre's nineteenth-century observation that smell is central to insect communication spurred entomologists and, later, chemical ecologists, neurobiologists, geneticists, structural biologists, and evolutionary biologists to investigate how insects detect survival-related compounds. Structural biologists resolved the three-dimensional structures of pheromone-binding proteins and odorant receptors (ORs), revealing features that enable specific interactions with semiochemicals. Researchers proposed that ORs evolved from gustatory receptors as insects adapted to terrestrial life and then specialized to detect species-specific sex pheromones. Most insects use both broadly and finely tuned receptors, but migratory locusts rely mainly on finely tuned ones. To test hypotheses, genes were silenced, expressed in empty neurons, or resurrected, leading to receptor de-orphanization and discovery of new semiochemicals through reverse chemical ecology. These receptors and coreceptors are expressed in olfactory receptor neurons (ORNs) within sensilla of the antennae and maxillary palps. Recent evidence suggests ORNs may express multiple receptor types, including odorant, ionotropic, and gustatory receptors.
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