University Park, Pennsylvania
March 31, 2006
A novel enzyme in corn helps the
plants defend themselves from voracious caterpillars by
disrupting the insects' ability to digest food, and ultimately
killing them, according to researcher s. The enzyme could be
used in tandem with other biological pesticides such as the Bt
toxin to prevent the pests from developing resistance and making
the toxin more effective.
"The enzyme is found in insect-resistant strains of corn, and it
breaks down proteins and peptides in the insects' gut. It is a
unique active defense against herbivory," says Dawn Luthe,
professor of plant stress biology at
Penn State University.
Luthe and researchers at
Mississippi State University have since developed several
lines of corn resistant to multiple pests, using conventional
plant breeding and insect-resistant strains of corn from
Antigua.
Researchers have found that when caterpillars fed on the
insect-resistant plants, one enzyme -- Mir1-CP or maize insect
resistance cysteine protease, in particular --accumulated at the
feeding site within an hour of the caterpillar's feeding and
continued to accumulate at the site for several days.
"Upon isolation and purification of the enzyme, we found that
Mir1-CP binds to chitin, a major component of insects and
fungi," says Luthe. "Physiological tests show that caterpillars
have impaired nutrient utilization when they eat the enzyme.
They just can't convert what they eat into body mass."
Luthe presented the findings at the annual meeting of the
American Chemical Society March 30 in Atlanta.
With the help of antibodies specific to the enzyme, the
researchers were able to determine that Mir1-CP is made in the
vascular bundles, or strands of conducting vessels in the stem
and leaves of a plant.
Luthe thinks that when an insect starts feeding, the enzyme is
probably transported to vascular tissue that conducts sugars and
other metabolic products upward from the leaves, as well as to
the soft tissue found in leaves and stem.
Though it is still unclear whether the transport of Mir1-CP is a
specific response to the insect feeding, studies show that maize
tissue that naturally expresses Mir1-CP causes a 50 percent
inhibition in caterpillar growth. Transgenic black Mexican sweet
corn cells that express Mir1-CP inhibit caterpillar growth by 70
percent, Luthe says.
Mir1-CP is harmful to caterpillars mainly because of its
damaging effect on their peritrophic matrix. This is a membrane
that lines the gut of most insects and aids digestion. It also
protects the insects from being invaded by microorganisms and
parasites through the food they eat.
At the heart of the matrix is a protein called the insect
intestinal mucin, or IIM. It is very similar to the mucus layer
in animals and is vital for nutrient utilization because it
helps the flow of nutrients into the food gut.
The researchers tested the permeability of the matrix using blue
dextran, a fermented sugar solution commonly used as a molecular
size marker. Results showed that Mir1-CP created holes in the
matrix.
To replicate the test in vivo, the researchers fed caterpillars
with plants susceptible to the insects and those resistant to
them. Results indicate that after seven days, the level of both
IIM and IIM messenger RNA in insects that were feeding on the
resistant plants had fallen significantly.
"If the IIM is being degraded by the enzyme, pieces of it should
not appear in the fecal pellets of the insect," notes the Penn
State researcher.
When used in conjunction with the Bt-toxin, a low dose of
Mir1-CP was able to achieve a very high mortality rate in the
insects, as well as an extremely low growth rate.
"In the long run, the enzyme degrades the insect's peritrophic
matrix and retards the caterpillar's ability to generate a new
one," says Luthe.
The research has potential global implications in generating a
cheap and highly effective way of controlling crop pests.
Other authors of the paper include Tibor Pechan, Srinidi Mohan,
Renuka Shivaji, Lorena Lopez, Alberto Camas, Erin Bassford,
Seval Ozkan, Peter Ma, all at Mississippi State University; and
W. Paul Williams, U.S.D.A.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture and the National Science
Foundation funded this study.
Graphics are at: http://www.psu.edu/ur/2006/cornenzymephotos.htm |