iScience (Jun 2024)

The mechanism of Andrena camellia in digesting toxic sugars

  • Zhen Li,
  • Shiqing Zhong,
  • Qiang Huang,
  • Yong Zhang,
  • Tianyu Xu,
  • Wenkai Shi,
  • Dongsheng Guo,
  • Zhijiang Zeng

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 27, no. 6
p. 109847

Abstract

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Summary: Camellia oleifera is an economically and medicinally valuable oilseed crop. Honeybee, the most abundant pollinator, rarely visits C. oleifera because of the toxic sugars in the nectar and pollen. These toxic sugars cannot be fully digested by honeybees and inhibit the process of synthesizing trehalose in honeybees. C. oleifera exhibits self-incompatibility, and its pollination heavily depends on Andrena camellia. However, the mechanism by which A. camellia digests toxic sugars in C. oleifera nectar and pollen remains unknown. Consequently, we identified and validated four single-copy genes (α-N-acetyl galactosamine-like, galactokinase, galactose-1-phosphate uridyltransferase, and UDP-galactose-4′-epimerase, abbreviated as NAGA-like, GALK, GALT, and GALE) essential for detoxifying toxic sugars in vitro. Then, we cloned the four genes into Escherichia coli, and expressed enzyme successfully degraded the toxic sugars. The phylogeny suggests that the genes were conserved and functionally diverged among the evolution. These results provide novel insights into pollinator detoxification during co-evolution.

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