Organ Specific Storage of Dietary Pyrrolizidine Alkaloids in the Arctiid Moth Creatonotos transiens

Abstract
Larvae of the arctiid moth Creatonotos transiens obtained each 5 mg of heliotrine, a pyrrolizidine alkaloid, via an artificial diet. 7 S-H eliotrine is converted into its enantiomer, 7 R1-heliotrine, and some minor metabolites, such as callimorphine. 7 S- and 7 R-heliotrine are present in the insect predominantly (more than 97%) as their N-oxides. The distribution of heliotrine in the organs and tissues of larvae, prepupae, pupae and imagines was analyzed by capillary gas-liquid chromatography. A large proportion of the alkaloid is stored in the integument of all developmental stages, where it probably serves as a chemical defence compound against predators. Female imagines had transferred substantial amounts of heliotrine to their ovaries and subsequently to their eggs; males partly directed it to their pheromone biosynthesis.