Saturday, May 16, 2020

Catnip's chemical attractant is new twist on old family tradition

FLORIDA MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY
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IMAGE: CATNIP EVOLVED ITS CAT-ATTRACTING CHEMICAL, ACTUALLY AN INSECT REPELLANT, TENS OF MILLIONS OF YEARS AFTER ONE OF ITS ANCESTORS HAD LOST THE ABILITY TO MAKE THIS TYPE OF COMPOUND. view more 
CREDIT: ALEX ABAIR
GAINESVILLE, Fla. --- Catnip is most famous for its ability to launch felines into a euphoric frenzy, but the origin of its cat-attracting chemical is a remarkable example of evolutionary innovation.
While the compound nepetalactone drives two-thirds of cats batty, likely by mimicking sex pheromones, its real purpose is protecting catnip from pests. Nepetalactone belongs to a class of chemicals called iridoids, which can repel insects as effectively as DEET.
Many of catnip's relatives in the mint family use iridoids as chemical armor. But an international team of researchers found the ancient ancestor of catnip lost a key iridoid-making gene. Descendants in this lineage - herbs such as basil, oregano, rosemary, lemon balm and mint - had to lean on other defenses, with one notable exception: catnip, which revived the family tradition by evolving a new iridoid production line from scratch.
The findings, including the first detailed look at catnip's nepetalactone recipe, were published today in Science Advances. They provide crucial insights into how plants lose and regain defensive compounds, said study co-author Pamela Soltis, Florida Museum of Natural History curator and University of Florida distinguished professor.
"If we know how evolutionarily flexible a trait is, we can hypothesize about how easy or difficult it might be to modify the trait in another species through plant breeding, genetic engineering or gene editing," she said. "It might be possible to make a crop more resistant to pests if we know that a close relative re-evolved a compound that had previously been lost."
Many plants in the mint family also have medicinally important compounds, said study co-author Douglas Soltis, Florida Museum curator and UF distinguished professor, pointing to iridoid-derived cancer treatments as an example.
"Understanding these plants' underlying biochemical pathways is key to using them for human health," he said.
Researchers sequenced the genomes of two species of catnip and hyssop, a close relative that does not produce iridoids. By comparing the genomes, analyzing the mint family tree and studying ancestral genes and enzymes, they were able to trace the sequence of events that led to the loss of iridoid production in catnip's ancestor between 55-65 million years ago and its re-emergence tens of millions of years later.
The deletion of a gene erased the ability of plants in the subfamily Nepetoideae to make iridoids. Whether the gene deletion was the result of a sudden mutation or a gradual "phasing out" of iridoid production as these plants switched to other chemical defenses remains unclear, Pamela Soltis said.
Without this gene, catnip had to co-opt a related gene to build a new biochemical pathway for making iridoids, beginning about 20 million years ago, Douglas Soltis said.
"It's sort of like, 'I lost my screwdriver, and this one isn't quite the same, but it will work,'" he said, quoting "Jurassic Park" character Ian Malcolm: "'Life, uh, finds a way.'"
The new pathway resulted in nepetalactone, which maintains some hallmark iridoid features, but has a unique chemical structure and properties, the researchers said. The enzymes involved in its production are not found in any related plant species.
"There is a lot of evolutionary back-and-forth in all sorts of characteristics in plants - such as the origin of succulence in cacti, jade plants and aloe, or multiple derivations of red or purple pigments in distantly related species," Pamela Soltis said. "But whenever the 'same' thing re-evolves, it always turns out that it has done so slightly differently - always with a 'twist.'"
Why catnip re-evolved the ability to produce iridoids is "the next big question," Douglas Soltis said.
"As the mint family migrated across Eurasia, semi-arid habitats could have imposed new selective pressures," he said. "Maybe iridoids are more effective as defense compounds in those environments. That can't explain the origin of the new pathway, but it can explain the selection for it once it originates."
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The study is part of the Mint Genome Project, a National Science Foundation-funded initiative that is unravelling the chemistry of the mint family's botanical compounds and how they're produced.
"Plants are constantly evolving new chemistry," said the study's lead researcher Sarah O'Connor, director of the Department of Natural Product Biosynthesis at Germany's Max Planck Institute for Chemical Ecology. "With our research, we would like to get snapshots of this evolution in action."
Grant Godden, Tal Kinser and Miao Sun of the Florida Museum also co-authored the study.

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