Alpha-amylases are major digestive enzymes that act in the first step of maltopolysaccharide digestion. In insects, these enzymes have long been studied for applied as well as purely scientific purposes. In many species, amylases are produced by multiple gene copies. Rare species are devoid of Amy gene. They are predominantly secreted in the midgut but salivary expression is also frequent, with extraoral activity. Enzymological parameters are quite variable among insects, with visible trends according to phylogeny: Coleopteran amylases have acidic optimum activity, whereas dipteran amylases have neutral preference and lepidopteran ones have clear alkaline preference. The enzyme structure shows interesting variations shaped by evolutionary convergences, such as the recurrent loss of a loop involved in substrate handling. Many works have focused on the action of plant amylase inhibitors on pest insect amylases, in the frame of crop protection by transgenesis. It appears that sensitivity or resistance to inhibitors is finely tuned and very specific and that amylases and their inhibitors have coevolved. The multicopy feature of insect amylases appears to allow tissue-specific or stage-specific regulation, but also to broaden enzymological abilities, such as pH range, and to overcome plant inhibitory defenses.
Introduction
While conquering virtually all terrestrial and freshwater habitats, insects have evolved various feeding preferences. Many are phytophagous: They may consume seeds (eg, grain pests like weevils), stems (eg, lepidopteran stem borers like Sesamia species), roots (like the corn rootworm Diabrotica virgifera), or leaves (eg, leaf miner moths) or be sap feeders or nectar feeders. Other insects are carnivorous, saprophagous (eg, Drosophila melanogaster), or bloodsuckers. Particularly, phytophagous insects may be polyphagous or more specialized on a single or few host plants. Indeed even in the saprophagous drosophilids, some species are specialized on a single host plant (Drosophila sechellia on Morinda citrifolia fruit,1 Drosophila erecta on Pandanus fruit2). These preliminary remarks are of importance because insects must harbor enzymatic tools devoted to their respective diets, for detoxifying or circumventing the plant defenses, and for metabolizing useful nutriments. Nutritional content is obviously different in plants and in animal flesh, or in blood, and insects have evolved to optimize energetic uptake from their food.
Here I will draw a quick and noncomprehensive picture of insect alpha-amylases. Alpha-amylases (EC 3.2.1.1) are glycosyl hydrolases that break down alpha-1,4 glycosidic bonds inside a maltopolysaccharide linear chain, mainly in starch and glycogen, resulting in maltose, maltotriose, and residual branched maltodextrins as final products. These molecules are in turn hydrolyzed into glucose by alpha-glucosidases. Starch granules may have various structures and composition, which are more or less resistant to amylase: It was shown that the amylases of the weevil Sitophilus oryzae were unable to attack raw starch granules from potato, tapioca, wheat, or amylose-containing corn, but did degrade pea starch.3 In the bruchid Zabrotes subfasciatus, mastication seems a necessary process to damage starch granules and enable them susceptible to enzymatic degradation.4 In the living word, alpha-amylases (hereafter named simply amylases) are almost ubiquitous and are of utmost importance for nutrition of bacteria, plants, fungi, and animals, a lot of which having multiple copies of amylase genes, owing to gene duplications5 or horizontal transfer.6 The question of the evolutionary advantage for an organism to have several, sometimes diverged, amylase gene copies remains raised. Some enlightenment could be gained from insects, most of which rely on polysaccharides for their energy supply, and then depend on amylase activity.
One may acknowledge roughly two types of amylase studies on insects according to their focus: first, basic research dealing, for instance, with enzymology, genetics, evolution, and ecology; second, applied research that seeks to characterize digestive enzymes of insect of economical importance, such as crop pests or disease vectors. Intriguingly, it sometimes seems that these two research communities, ie, basic vs applied, are somewhat ignorant of each other.
Historically, insect amylases were widely studied early when electrophoresis techniques were developed, for it was easy and cheap. It allowed numerous studies on polymorphism when this unexpected kind of variation at the molecular level was evidenced,78–9 especially in Drosophila, raising questions about the functional or adaptive significance of the observed polymorphism, in terms of fitness and selection,1011121314–15 or at the molecular level, in terms of catalytic activity or regulation. Amylase was then used as a gene model during the controversy between selectionnists and neutralists.12 For instance, researchers wondered if the various “isozymes” of amylases (ie, electrophoretic variants) had similar catalytic activities, similar heat sensitivities, similar tissular or temporal expression profiles?9,16171819202122–23 Also, attempts were made to link some characteristics of amylases to the natural diets of their producers, eg, electric charge,24 or catalytic activity.25,26
A Multigene Family in Insects
Several amylase gene copies (Amy) were reported in many insect species. Table 1 shows the number of gene copies that were reported in literature or by search in databases. The copy number varies from only 1 (eg, in honeybees) to more that 12 (in some mosquitoes). Indeed, most species harbor several copies. The Amy family was well described in Drosophila, as soon as 1967 for D melanogaster when Bahn28 discovered the Amy gene duplication, but importantly, like in many other insect groups, Amy duplications occurred largely independently in many Drosophila lineages.293030–31,5051–52 In this only genus, the number of gene copies vary from 1 (eg, Drosophila virilis)53 to 6 (Drosophila ananassae),30 not counting the paralog named Amyrel (Amy-related), a divergent copy (40% in amino acids) which is present throughout the drosophilids and is probably ancestral to Muscomorpha.54,55 Even more profound sequence divergence between Amy copies within genomes exists in most insect orders. Figure 1 shows a tree of selected amylase protein sequences of insects. Deep splitting of clusters is visible within Coleoptera, Lepidoptera, Hymenoptera, and Diptera, showing important divergences between paralogs. It is possible that intraspecific copy number variation occurs in species that have several Amy copies, like D ananassae, but there is no published report to my knowledge in insects, whereas it is well documented in humans59 and dogs.60 Classically, for a multigene family, sequence divergence30 and concerted evolution among copies61,62 were reported. Note the absence of amylase gene in rare genomes, such as the bloodsucker louse Pediculus humanus, the sap-feeding aphid Acyrthosiphon pisum, and other aphidomorphs (Table 1). It is tempting to link this deficiency to their specific, specialized feeding habits. However, amylase activity was detected in some aphids,63 although the genes were not identified, and a purely bloodsucking bug like Rhodnius prolixus does have an amylase gene. Nonetheless, exaptation of such an enzyme to another function linked to hematophagy is a possibility, because in this species an α-glucosidase was recruited for hemozoin formation from the heme of hemoglobin.64 The number of Amy gene copies cannot be clearly related to the diet. For instance, the copy number may vary greatly between related species that share similar diets (D virilis vs D melanogaster; Tenebrio molitor vs Tribolium castaneum; A pisum vs Bemisia tabaci; Table 1). However, it has been proposed that several gene copies may increase dietary flexibility, for instance, in housefly33 or in the soldier bug Podisus maculiventris.48
Table 1.
Number of reported Amy genes in insects from the literature or from genome database searches.
Sequence and Enzymatic Characterization of Insect Amylases
Irrespective of the copy number, it is logically believed that phytophagous insects must have more active amylolytic enzymes than carnivorous insects65 and that various vegetal diet may regulate amylase levels differentially (see below). In line with the fact that insect amylase studies are often devoted to crop pests, most enzymatic characterization of insect amylases are from such insects, like seed-feeding beetles, or lepidopteran stem borers. However, model insects like drosophilids were intensively investigated as well. Using purified recombinant amylases, Commin et al25 attempted to evidence enzymological differences between amylases of the generalist D melanogaster and two specialists, D sechellia and D erecta. But more general and accurate comparisons between the specific activities (kcat) of insect amylases from species differing in their diet are still wanting.
The D melanogaster Amy sequence was published in 1986.66 Innumerable insect amylase sequences were published since then. Figure 1 is a small subset of what is available at GenBank and in various genome databases. These sequences allow comparative studies about the gene structure and protein evolution, regarding conserved or divergent parts of the protein. All insect amylases have about the same size, ie, coding sequences around 1500 nucleotides, corresponding to a mature protein weight around 50 to 55 kDa after removing the signal peptide, as amylase is secreted (Table 2). An exception is in some mosquitoes, where a long N-terminal domain of unknown function occurs in some copies.71 Accordingly, it is surprising that some amylase protein sizes reported in the literature are very different from this value.69,72 This may be in most cases due to migration artifacts arising from abnormal sodium dodecyl sulfate binding on proteins with very basic or acidic isoelectronic point or on glycosylated proteins, resulting in migration defects and false mass estimations. In such cases, amylase band excision from the gel and mass spectrometry analysis should provide more accurate results. The intron content of Amy genes is quite variable in insects, from no intron in D melanogaster to at least 6 in Lepidoptera73 so that gene lengths may vary a lot. At least one case of alternative splicing was reported, in the beetle Ips typographus.43 Importantly, insect amylases are overall quite similar to other animal amylases. They have been assigned to the GH13_15 subfamily of glycosyl hydrolases,74 with other invertebrate amylases, whereas vertebrate amylases belong to GH13_24, a somewhat artificial division. All animal amylases (and beyond) are made of 3 major domains, named A, B and C and the structure requires a calcium ion.75 The catalytic apparatus, in domain A, is conserved, but some interesting facts are to be noticed: An amino acid stretch named “flexible loop” with the motif GHGA, protruding near the catalytic cleft,75 which is an ancestral feature, is missing in many insect amylase sequences.5 Figure 1 indicates the sequences lacking this motif. For example, the GHGA motif is deleted and the flexible loop is much shortened in most coleopteran amylase sequences, except, intriguingly in two of them. This is surprising because, otherwise, it would have been obvious that the GHGA motif was lost in the coleopteran ancestor. In Hymenoptera, two types exist, one gene group with the flexible loop, another group lacking the loop. This suggests that the two types have been coexisting ancestrally. In Muscomorpha flies, the Amyrel paralog also lacks the GHGA motif.54,55 These observations suggest recurrent losses of the flexible loop in the course of evolution (convergences), due to selective constraints that remain to elucidate (see below). Another interesting feature is the substitution of a conserved arginine into a glutamine in some unrelated amylases, ie, another convergence. This arginine is involved in the fixation of an activating chloride ion which changes the protein conformation and without which a detrimental salt bridge interaction would form. The glutamine is found in all Lepidopteran amylases (studied in details by Pytelková et al35) and in the Amyrel protein of a part of drosophilids, eg, D virilis, but not D melanogaster.76 Those glutamine-bearing amylases cannot bind the chloride ion but are nonetheless active, chloride independent,35,76 probably due to compensating mutations, because simply mutating to a glutamine when an arginine is normally present almost abolishes enzymatic activity.76 It was proposed that the chloride independence would be an adaptation to an alkaline pH in the midgut.35
Table 2.
Estimates of amylase molecular weights in some insects.
The optimum pH of amylases generally corresponds to the pH values in the midgut lumen.72 The optimum pH of insect amylases varies greatly depending on the species. Table 3 shows the optimum pH reported for some insect species. Coleoptera show mostly acidic optimum pH for amylase activity, whereas Lepidopteran amylases generally have alkaline preferences. Dipteran amylases have more neutral preference. Therefore, the hypothesis that chloride independence is adapted to high pH values does not hold in the case of Amyrel working at a neutral pH. In some species, several amylases are produced, with different pH optima, due to different tissue specificities37,108 or stage specificities.104 Dow119 suggested that a high gut pH in insects, such as in Lepidoptera, could be an adaptation to feeding on tannin-rich plants, because high pH decreases the binding of tannins to nutritious proteins and thus enhances digestibility.
Table 3.
Optimum pH of insect amylases, from published studies, and inhibition or noninhibition by plant amylase inhibitors or other plant extracts.
The optimum temperatures reported are typical of mesophilic amylases for the insects studied to date. Note however that results may vary significantly according to purification and assay conditions. Indeed, the temperature for maximal activity is strongly dependent on the assay duration, because long incubation at high temperature accelerates the enzyme denaturation; raw extracts contain proteases that are also activated by increased temperature and therefore degrade proteins in the sample, including amylases. This results in a lower apparent optimal temperature. For instance, optimum temperature for amylases of D melanogaster, D sechellia, and D erecta was estimated 37°C on raw extracts,26 but rather 57°C to 60°C using purified enzymes produced in vitro.25,120 To avoid this drawback, addition of commercially available protease inhibitor cocktails to crude extracts is a good practice. It is supposed that species that experience sun exposure in open fields should have more thermal-resistant amylases than species living in cold areas. But therefore it is not easy to compare optimum temperatures among amylases from insects that have contrasted thermal preferences without using standardized enzyme purification and assay protocols.
Localization, Secretion, and Regulation of Amylases in Insects
In most species studied, amylase is secreted at least in the midgut. It seems that in a number of insect species, the enzyme is partly recovered from the residual undigested food, through endo-ectoperitrophic circulation.72,121 In Drosophila, Amy tissue-specific expression was studied in details; no clear expression was found outside larval or adult midgut, as can be seen in RNAseq data at FlyBase. In D melanogaster, compartmentalization was found along the midgut, with no expression in the acidic mid-midgut, and 3 areas in the anterior midgut and 2 areas in the posterior midgut, with various combinations depending on genotypes and diet.122 This tissue-specific expression was controlled by a putative trans-acting factor named “map” (midgut activity pattern),77 located 2 cM downstream of the structural genes. However, the map gene was never identified until now in genome annotation. Similar complex midgut expression was found in other Drosophila species in larvae and adults.17,123 In D ananassae, different gene copies were expressed in different parts of the midgut.17 Whereas extraoral amylase activity was recognized in Drosophila,124,125 leading to a “social digestion,”126 the enzyme is produced by the midgut and regurgitated, but not by the salivary glands. A fine picture of amylase secretion in adult D melanogaster was also published more recently.127 In other Diptera, amylase expression may take place in salivary glands, as in the adult sand fly Lutzomyia longipalpis,107 where it is downregulated after a blood meal. In Aedes aegypti, an amylase gene is specifically expressed in adult female salivary glands,71 showing that the occurrence of several Amy copies may serve fine regulation. A general review of midgut amylase secretion in insects was given in a rich review on digestive enzymes of insects by Terra and Ferreira,72 who studied the precise localization and secretion process, whether apocrine secretion (Lepidoptera, Coleoptera) or exocytosis (eg, Diptera). It appeared that the enzyme may be produced in the midgut and be moved forth to the foregut, where the first step of digestion, that involves cutting long polysaccharides by amylase, occurs. This is the case in Coleoptera, Dictyoptera, and Orthoptera.72,128,129
In bugs, seed-feeding species have exclusively midgut-produced amylases, contrary to predatory species.79 The predatory spined soldier bug P maculiventris injects a salivary amylase into its prey, performing an extraoral digestion,48 like the Miridae Lygus lineolaris.49 In the omnivorous Hemiptera Apolygus lucorum, amylase is produced mainly in salivary glands, and to a lesser extent in the midgut.130 In Coleoptera, expression may be limited to the midgut like in T molitor121 but may take place also (or alternatively) in the foregut and hindgut,22 or in the head in I typographus. In this species, the head-specific amylase is an unusually smaller protein due to alternative splicing.43 Lepidoptera often produce amylase in their salivary glands in addition to midgut, which may be excreted through the mouth, eg, in Sesamia nonagrioides (Noctuidae) (Da Lage, unpublished), in the mulberry moth Glyphodes pyloalis (Pyralidae) (possibly produced by different gene copies),37 in Chilo suppressalis (Pyralidae) with a tissular differentiation of the electromorphs,109 or in Helicoverpa armigera.22 In Bombyx mori, amylase activity was also reported in hemolymph, although at a much lower level than in the digestive tract.108 In the Tasar silkworm Antheraea mylitta, there is also a hemolymph activity.111 In Hymenoptera, the ant Acromyrmex subterraneus shows amylase activity mostly in the midgut but also in labial glands.131 In the honeybee Apis mellifera, amylase activity is important in the hypopharyngeal gland of foragers, but not nurses.46 Indeed, amylase is a component of honey. In Blattella germanica (Dictyoptera), an amylase named BGTG1 is active in the tergal gland and could play a nondigestive role by processing phagostimulating sugars that function as nuptial feeding stimulants.132,133
Many studies have focused on the regulation of amylase secretion by food. At the genetic and molecular level, Drosophila has been the main model. D melanogaster larvae adapt amylase excretion to the hardness of food.125 In the fruit fly, mostly downregulation by glucose or other sugars was reported,134135-136 and also induction by starch, especially in larvae.136 Glucose repression was largely dependent on the strain, therefore on the genotype.135 Chng et al127 have demonstrated the involvement of the transforming growth factor β /activin signaling pathway in this repression. Such regulation is classically interpreted by sparing resource when amylase is not necessary.16 In a selection experiment, it was shown that genotypes favoring low amylase activity were favored in glucose-rich environments, and that natural populations of D melanogaster were adapted to a sugar-rich (but variable) environment.16 This is not the case in housefly, which seems insensitive to dietary glucose, and may secrete amylase constitutively due to its polyphagous diet.33 In the omnivorous bug A lucorum, amylase production is induced by vegetal food, whereas proteases are induced by animal food.130 In the moth H armigera, amylase expression depends on food richness in starch and saccharose. Higher levels of sugars occurring in the natural host plant lower H. armigera amylase gene expression.22 In the Western corn rootworm D virgifera (Chrysomelidae), there is much more amylase produced on maize seedlings than on an artificial diet.41 Interestingly, amylase secretion may be upregulated in the presence of an inhibitor in Ephestia kuehniella as a compensation for loss of activity.35 Also, amylase is upregulated upon insecticidal treatment in the cockroach Periplaneta americana.129
Amylase regulation is also stage specific. Larvae and adults may have very different feeding habits; in some species adults do not feed at all. In Lepidoptera and Coleoptera, most studies were done on larvae, the stages which damage crops. Amy genes may be differentially expressed in larvae or in adults, in the sense that not only the same gene may be differentially expressed,137 but also different gene copies.80 In Muscomorpha, Amyrel is expressed only in larvae.54 In D ananassae, which has six Amy copies, some are active in larvae but not in adults.17 In D. serrata and D. lebanonensis, larvae also express different amylase variants from those of adult flies.136 In the bug P maculiventris, the 3 isoforms show specific temporal expression.48
Insect Amylases and Their Inhibitors
One of the most fascinating aspects of insect amylases is their relationships with plant defenses directed toward them, ie, amylase inhibitors. Phytophagous insects face inhibitory molecules produced by plants as defenses against their feeding on them. Many studies were devoted to the sensitivity or resistance to plant extracts, mainly proteinaceous inhibitors, which are abundant in cereals and leguminosae, with the goal of making transgenic plants resistant to their own pests. As shown in Table 3, a given insect amylase may be insensitive to a plant inhibitor, and sensitive to an inhibitor from another plant, and reciprocally, a given inhibitor may inhibit strongly one insect amylase but have no action on a related species. Kluh et al80 have compared various insect species for their amylase sensitivity toward the αAI1 inhibitor from Phaseolus vulgaris, the most studied proteinaceous inhibitor. Importantly, there is a pH dependence in amylase/inhibitor interaction, so that the study must be done at the relevant biological pH at which interaction forms.80,101 There was a general trend among insect orders regarding their sensitivities (in fact more between legume feeders and the others), and at a lower taxonomic level, there were contrasted results too. For instance, Acanthoscelides obtectus amylase was tolerant to αAI1, but the one of T castaneum was very sensitive. It is related to the fact that A. obtectus feeds on legume seeds. Experiments were carried out using 1% αAI1 in the food, a realistic value. Also, amylase paralogs in a species may have contrasted sensitivities toward inhibitors, and this is another adaptive response to overcome plant defenses.35,80,138 The pea weevil Bruchus pisorum is sensitive to the bean inhibitor αAI1, but not to the pea inhibitor. This lead to design transgenic peas expressing the bean inhibitor in their developing seeds, yielding a high larval mortality (93%) in the pests.95 Unfortunately, immunogenicity was reported for transgenic amylase inhibitors likely because of minor changes in molecular architecture of the transferred protein.139 Similar experiments were done on another grain legume culture, the cowpea Vigna unguiculata, transgenized with the same αAI1. It became resistant to its pests Callosobruchus maculatus and C. chinensis.140 Coffee plants were also transformed with αAI1 and became resistant to the coffee berry borer Hypothenemus hampei.141 αAI1 has a paralog in some wild accessions of P vulgaris, named αAI2. They share 78% identity86 but have different inhibitory properties on insects83 (Table 3). None of them are able to inhibit the Anthonomus grandis amylase, but chimeric proteins made from pieces of both inhibitors were able to show inhibition.86 Note that another way to overcome plant inhibitors is to produce a lot of amylase.84
At the molecular level, interactions between amylases and their inhibitors were studied, in part to elucidate why closely related amylases may exhibit so contrasted sensitivities. The tridimensional structure of the T molitor amylase (TMA) was published, in interaction with different inhibitors.91,142 Compared with mammal amylases, a striking feature of TMA is the lack of the flexible loop. It was supposed to explain differences in sensitivities between mammals and insects toward some inhibitors, because in porcine amylase the existing loop is pushed away in the presence of inhibitor instead of moving toward the saccharide.94 However, many insects have the loop, and this may not be the reason.143,144 Loops protruding from the inhibitors interact with the catalytic cleft of the enzyme through ionic and hydrogen bonds98 and may also block the sugar-binding “subsites”91; the formation of the complex depends on a large number of amino acids at the interface of the two proteins.102 The sensitivity or resistance to an inhibitor depends rather from multiple incompatible structural changes rather than a single crucial mutation.80 Importantly, the efficiency of inhibitors also depends on their own natural resistance to the insect proteases encountered in the gut.84,102
Concluding Remarks
Most insects are strongly dependent on their amylases for development and survival. In this review, I have shown that the presence of several gene copies can be of interest in different ways: for more enzyme production, for fine developmental and tissue-specific expression, for broadening pH and substrate range, for overcoming the natural defenses of plants. The coevolution between insect amylases and proteinaceous plant inhibitors is a passionating adaptation paradigm and would deserve more basic studies. In this respect, more structures of insect amylases would be needed, but only the one of T molitor is publicly available to date.
REFERENCES
Notes
[1] Financial disclosure The author(s) disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship and/or publication of this article: This work was supported by regular funding from the CNRS to the author.