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Allocation and metabolism of naturally occurring dietary amino acids in the Oriental hornet.

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Oriental hornet (Vespa orientalis) foragers are strong, long-distance flyers exhibiting a high metabolic rate. Accordingly, they feed on carbohydrate-rich diets, such as floral nectar and larval secretions. These nutritional sources,… Click to show full abstract

Oriental hornet (Vespa orientalis) foragers are strong, long-distance flyers exhibiting a high metabolic rate. Accordingly, they feed on carbohydrate-rich diets, such as floral nectar and larval secretions. These nutritional sources, in addition to carbohydrates, also contain free amino acids (AAs). Leucine, glycine, and proline are three common AAs in the diet of social wasps. Using diets enriched with carbon-specific (13C1) isotopically labeled leucine, glycine, and proline, and a cavity ring-down spectroscope (CRDS) stable carbon isotope analyzer, we examined the metabolism of these AAs, their allocation in the hornets' respiration during rest and activity, and their incorporation into the body tissues. In hornets that consumed 13C proline, we detected the heavy isotope only in the exhaled CO2, suggesting that proline was utilized solely as a metabolic fuel and was not incorporated into their body (i.e., as protein). Labeled carbons from glycine and leucine, in contrast, were found in all the examined tissues (i.e., muscles, brain, fat bodies, ovaries, and venom glands), and were also utilized as a metabolic fuel, but mostly during rest. Using AAs labeled with a specific stable carbon isotope, we demonstrate the compatibility between the hornet's metabolic requirements and AA use, in both the living organism as a whole and in its different body tissues.

Keywords: amino acids; metabolism; hornet; proline; oriental hornet

Journal Title: Insect biochemistry and molecular biology
Year Published: 2021

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