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Absolute Stereochemistry of TXIB, a Bioactive Plasticizer That Inhibits Oviposition of the Peach Fruit Moth, Carposina sasakii (Lepidoptera: Carposinidae).

Haruna KazamaYuto OhataYoichi IshiguriHajime OnoNaoki MoriNaoko Yoshinaga
Published in: Journal of chemical ecology (2022)
TXIB (2,2,4-trimethyl-1,3-pentanediol diisobutyrate), a common plasticizer, inhibits the peach fruit moth, Carposina sasakii from ovipositing on young apple fruits. Using an insect assay and gas chromatography with an electroantennographic detector (GC-EAD) analysis, the stereochemistry of the bioactive compound was identified to be 3R, whereas (3S)-TXIB showed no activity. The inactive enantiomer did not inhibit the activity of commercially available TXIB, which was a racemic mixture. When the female moth was placed on the TXIB-treated fruits in the oviposition assay, she repeated grooming antennae. The reason why the moth detects this artificial compound is unknown, although the stereochemical structure of TXIB could have given an abnormality to the moth's antennae.
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