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Fig trees and wasps recognize each other through precisely matched scent proteins

Europe PMC · 2026-06-09

Fig trees actively control their own pollination timing by switching their scent profile at key developmental stages: drawing pollinating wasps in with sweet attractant compounds when their flowers are ready, then switching to repellent scents once pollination is complete. The wasps carry specialized scent-binding proteins calibrated to recognize their host tree's specific chemical signals, revealing the molecular basis for why each fig species pairs exclusively with its own wasp species.

1

Fig trees dynamically regulate scent output across development, strongly activating attractant-producing enzymes during the receptive phase and switching to repellent-producing enzymes after pollination

2

Pollinator fig wasp scent-binding proteins showed markedly higher binding affinities to host fig volatiles than proteins from non-pollinator wasps, explaining species-pair exclusivity

3

Site-directed mutagenesis pinpointed single amino acid residues, Phe109 and Phe117, as the molecular keys in two pollinator wasp binding proteins that enable high-affinity recognition

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