Accueil > Documentation > L’olfactif > Vive la science......le canal Orco

Vive la science......le canal Orco

mercredi 19 février 2020 - Rédaction SNP

La capacité de l’odorat des insectes est incroyablement diverse. Les scientifiques viennent de révéler un nouvelle structure de protéines permettant d’expliquer comment ils ont développé des millions de récepteurs d’odeurs adaptés à un large éventail de modes de vie et d’habitats.

Cela pourrait être un point de départ pour concevoir des attractifs et des répulsifs, qui brouillent le code olfactif et les empêchent de trouver leurs hôtes humains, vegetaux, autres insectes....

 On comprend mieux à la fois les opportunités fantastiques de ces découvertes et l’ampleur de la tâche pour nos scientifiques.

 

Insects’ Ability to Smell par IAPPS

Biophysical Society

newswise-fullscreen Insects’ Ability to Smell is Phenomenally Diverse, a New Protein Structure Hints at How
Newswise : Insects’ Ability to Smell is Phenomenally Diverse, a New Protein Structure Hints at How
Credit : Image courtesy of Vanessa Ruta.

A view of the Orco channel from above, looking down into the pore. When odorant receptor sequences were mapped onto this Orco channel structure, some areas were highly similar, shown in magenta, and other areas were variable, shown in cyan. Most similarities in odorant receptors are concentrated along the central pore, leaving the rest of the protein free to diversify, suggesting how the architecture of this receptor family accommodates its remarkable sequence diversity and facilitates the evolution of odor tuning.

Newswise — SAN DIEGO, CA – Even though they don’t have conventional noses, insects have adapted to smell odors in nearly every imaginable niche. Mosquitoes find us by our odor molecules binding to odor receptors on their antennae, bees are drawn to flowers the same way, whereas ticks detect an approaching host using receptors on their forelegs. Insects’ ability to smell is uniquely adapted to their needs and habitats and Vanessa Ruta, Associate Professor at Rockefeller University, reveals a key to this versatility in research presented on Monday, February 17 at the 64th Annual Meeting of the Biophysical Society in San Diego, California.

“All animals use large families of olfactory receptors to detect the incredible variety of chemicals that exist around us. Insects evolved a unique molecular solution, the largest and most diverse group of specialized channels in nature, due to the large number of different insect species. And yet, we knew so little about these proteins,” Ruta said. Ruta and colleagues unveiled the structure of a protein for insect scent that provides an explanation for how insects evolved millions of odor receptors suited for a wide range of lifestyles and habitats.

Each insect olfactory unit is a channel comprised of two different proteins : an odor receptor that is opened by a specific scent molecule, and a co-receptor named Orco. While the odor receptors are highly specific to each species of insect, Orco is nearly the same in all of them. “You can take an Orco from one insect and it works with any other insect’s odor receptor,” explains Ruta. How one Orco assembles with hundreds of thousands of odor receptors was a fascinating evolutionary and molecular puzzle for Ruta, and she wanted to look at it in greater detail.

Using cryo-electron microscopy, Ruta and colleagues solved Orco’s structure, which serves as the first structural template to understand this huge protein family. “Orco itself can form an ion channel, unlike any others,” said Ruta. It features a central pore surrounded by four loosely-associated subunits, which explains how it can assemble with so many different odor receptors. “By minimizing inter-subunit interactions, it’s able to accommodate many protein sequences,” Ruta explained, they believe it can assemble with an odor receptor and share a common channel. Orco’s shape may also be crucial for evolution.

When Ruta mapped the sequence of odor receptors onto the Orco channel the similarity was strong in pore, but weak in the four loosely-associated subunits, which may allow those parts to diversify and evolve rapidly. Orco also likely provides a channel that works no matter how much the odor receptor diversifies, since they assemble together.

Most insects rely heavily on smells to navigate the world. And when it comes to insect vectors of disease, like mosquitoes, Ruta says, “this could be a starting point for designing insect repellents or insect confusants, that scramble the olfactory code and prevent them from finding their human hosts.”

Derniers articles

23 mai, par Rédaction SNP

SNP en Occitanie

Nous sommes très fiers, d’avoir été invités à cette réunion CROPSAV Occitanie qui est aussi une grande région de palmiers où nous serons représentés par notre délégué Occitanie notre ami François GROLEAU entrepreneur en (...)

20 mai, par Rédaction SNP

Une excellente révision sur le dactylifera (dattier)

"Généralités sur le palmier dattier
Le palmier dattier porte le nom latin « Phoenix dactylifera » et ‘’ nakhil’’ en arabe. Cette appellation botanique donnée par Linné depuis 1734, dérive vraisemblablement du mot (...)

Edito

Edito d’avril 2023

8 mai, par Rédaction SNP

Chers amis et passionnés du palmier,
Immediate take off pour la nouvelle version d’Air SNP au secours des derniers propriétaires....
Mes phoenix canariensis ont été brutalement frappés, du jamais vu depuis 15 ans. J’ai entrepris sur-le-champ une taille crayon sur tous . Sur les # 40 sujets 4 ont été sévèrement attaqués. Nous avons effectué le protocole d’assainissement mécanique en prenant particulièrement garde au risque (...)