Why do cats lick and chew catnip and act so crazy afterwards?
[June 16, 2022: Yoshihiro Azuma, Iwate University, Japan]
A cat licks and chews catnip. (CREDIT: Creative Commons)
The research team first focused on their observation that silver vine leaves crumpled and torn by feline licking and chewing appeared to have a much stronger aromatic odor compared to intact leaves. They quantified the airborne emission and chemical profiles of iridoids that induce the feline response (such as nepetalactol, dihydronepetalactone, and isoiridomyrmecin) before and after feline licking and chewing.
Physical damage of silver vine by cats promoted the immediate emission of total iridoids, which was 10-fold higher than from intact leaves. Leaf damage also changed the composition of iridoids in silver vine. Nepetalactol accounts for over 90% of total iridoids in intact leaves, but this drops to about 45% in damaged leaves as other iridoids greatly increase.
To examine whether these changes in iridoids when silver vine leaves are damaged influence the feline response, the research team prepared synthetic iridoid cocktails corresponding to the ratios found in intact versus damaged leaves, and presented these simultaneously to a set of cats. The altered iridoid mixture corresponding to damaged leaves promoted a much more prolonged response.
“It was easy to speculate that the response duration would increase with the amount of iridoid. However, it was surprising that the change in iridoid composition when silver vine leaves were crumpled and torn by cats also greatly increased the cats’ response.
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The increased emission of iridoids from damaged leaves and changed chemical composition add together to induce a more extended duration of rubbing and rolling response, allowing cats to transfer more mosquito repellents to their fur. This helps to reduce the health risks and irritation associated with mosquitoes. We can say that licking and chewing these plant leaves also contributes to chemical pest defence in cats”, said Prof. Masao Miyazaki of Iwate University, a leader of the research project.
“We also examined whether feline licking and chewing of leaves has similar effects on the amount and composition of iridoids in the well-known cat attractant plant, catnip, as well as silver vine”, said Reiko Uenoyama, the paper’s first author. “Damaged catnip emitted 20-fold more total iridoids compared to intact leaves. However, in contrast to silver vine, leaf damage did not alter the composition of catnip iridoids. Both intact and damaged extracts of catnip consisted almost solely of nepetalactone, which is present at only very low levels in silver vine.”
Total iridoid levels were approximately 40-times higher in damaged catnip leaves compared to damaged silver vine leaves. The researchers examined whether these differences between damaged catnip and silver vine stimulated a different level of the feline response to these two plants. Interestingly, cats showed a comparable duration of response to 0.4 mg of damaged catnip-cocktail and 0.01 mg of damaged silver vine-cocktail, which corresponded to an equivalent amount of damaged catnip and silver vine.
But if the same amount of iridoid cocktails was presented to cats from the two plants, they were much more responsive to the damaged silver vine-cocktail than damaged catnip cocktail, showing they are sensitive to the silver vine iridoids at a much lower concentration. This was not the case when the damaged silver vine-cocktail was modified by replacing the main silver vine iridoid nepetalactol in the mixture with catnip nepetalactone.
“We found that the prolonged feline response to the complex iridoids emitted from damaged silver vine leaves depended on the combination of nepetalactol with other iridoids such as isodihydronepetalactone”, said Miyazaki.
Finally, the research team showed that mosquitoes are more sensitive to the complex cocktail of iridoids that is induced by damage to silver vine leaves compared to the nepetalactol-dominated iridoids in intact silver vine. The diversification of iridoids in damaged silver vine leaves provides a stimulus that is more repellent to mosquitoes at low concentration, inducing a faster aversive response than nepetalactol- or nepetalactone-dominated iridoids in plants.
Catnip and silver vine have been known as plants that are both unusually attractive to cats but are not closely related. These unrelated plants have evolved to produce very similar, but not identical iridoids as secondary plant metabolites.
The research team suggests that the olfactory and behavioral sensitivity of cats to plant iridoids has been fine-tuned to show a prolonged characteristic response toward either a low level of complex iridoids emitted from damaged silver vine or a much higher level of nepetalactone emitted from damaged catnip.
“Our findings highlight the possibility that plant-damaging behavior, which occurs alongside self-anointing, might play an important role in gaining pest-repellency in other animals as well as cats”, said Jane Hurst, the paper’s co-author at the University of Liverpool. “Our study has also provided valuable insight into how we can obtain potent natural repellents against pest insects from plants.”
Miyazaki and his colleagues are now examining the molecular mechanisms in the feline olfactory system that sense plant iridoids. Such studies promise to answer the key remaining questions of why this response is limited to Felidae species and why some cats do not respond to these plants.
For more science news stories check out our New Discoveries section at The Brighter Side of News.
Note: Materials provided above by Iwate University, Japan. Content may be edited for style and length.
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Tags: #New_Discoveries, #Global_Good_News, #Research, #Medical_News, #Cats, #Catnip, #Behavior, #Science, #The_Brighter_Side_of_News
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