West Lafayette, Indiana
October 25, 2004
A new Michael Jordan of toxins
isn't required to increase crop protection against bugs as long
as the right genes are strategically placed to take their shots
at destructive insects, researchers report.
Plants modified with protectant
genes designed to kill resistant insects can extend the
usefulness of currently used pest-control methods and delay the
development of pesticide-resistant bugs, according to
Purdue University scientists
and their collaborators from the University of
Wisconsin-Madison, Monsanto Co., the University of Illinois and
the University of California, Davis. The researchers' findings
appear in this month's issue of the
Journal of
Theoretical Biology.
"We always thought that it
would take a Michael Jordan of toxins - a superstar of toxins to
effectively halt insect resistance to the current generation of
insecticides," said Barry Pittendrigh, a Purdue associate
professor of entomology and lead author of the study. "We found
that moderately effective genetically engineered protectants
used in plants in the buffer zone around the main crops can play
a major role in insect control, and they should be easier to
identify than highly effective protectants.
"You don't find a superstar
very often, but it may not be difficult to find good players, or
worthwhile insect-control agents."
Farmers who use bioengineered
crop protectants also use a buffer, or refuge, around the
outside of fields that contains plants lacking the high-toxicity
genetic modification in the main field that kills most insects.
The refuge, usually about 20 percent of the acreage planted,
delays development of insects resistant to the main-field,
high-toxicity protectants, but some individuals in the
destructive insect group have genes that allow them to survive.
Using a computer model, the
scientists determined that within a refuge, one could add a
moderate plant protectant, or journeyman player, that kills 30
percent to 50 percent of insects that carry a rare resistance
gene.
If developed to a practical
level, equipping the refuge with a moderately toxic protectant
gene could dramatically delay development of new resistant
insects that could attack the main crop, Pittendrigh said.
"When we first started this
project, we didn't believe that you could use a genetic toxin
that was effective in killing a moderate number of resistant
insects, so this finding was very surprising," he said.
Over time, insects exposed to
specific plant protectants undergo genetic changes so the highly
effective genetic toxins no longer affect them. This latest
research suggests it may be easier than previously thought to
find commercially viable protectants to control these resistant
insects because moderate-toxicity protectant genes are much
easier to discover than high-toxicity superstars.
The specific problem the
researchers attacked is that insects susceptible to the
high-toxicity genetic protectant used in the main field crops
can survive, breed and reproduce in the refuge. Farmers, who now
use crops with high-toxicity protectant genes to fight bugs,
don't use those plants in the refuge. So the crops in the border
area are susceptible to insect attack.
When susceptible insects from
the refuge breed with each other or with resistant insects, the
high-toxicity genetically protected plants in the main fields
still kill most of the bugs' offspring.
A moderately effective genetic
modification inserted into crops specifically to kill resistant
insects that survive in the refuge can lengthen the usefulness
of the primary genetic protectant used in the main field,
Pittendrigh said. These specially designed refuge-area
protectants create a phenomenon called negative cross-resistance
because the moderate-toxicity protectant kills the insects that
are resistant to the primary protectant.
"If we could discover and use
moderately effective negative cross-resistance compounds in a
refuge, it would work just like an oil filter in a car,"
Pittendrigh said. "Like the oil filter removing impurities, the
refuge with negative cross-resistance protectants could
eliminate many of the genetically resistant insects that
otherwise might invade the main crop.
"We used mathematical models to
test this concept, and we were very surprised by the findings.
Although these results are exciting, we are well aware that a
number of issues must be addressed before this approach can
become practically applicable."
The other researchers are Larry
Murdock, Purdue entomology professor; Patrick Gaffney, formerly
of the University of Wisconsin-Madison; Joseph Huesing, Monsanto
Co. research entomologist; David Onstad, University of Illinois
Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Sciences; and
Richard Roush, University of California, Davis.
The Purdue
Department of Entomology
provided the funding for this research.
Writer: Susan Steeves
Source: Barry Pittendrigh
Agriculture News Page
Related Web sites:
Plant Resistance to Insects and Nematode Team
Online copy of
"Active" Refuges Can Inhibit the Evolution of Resistance in
Insects Towards Transgenic Insect-Resistant Plants
ABSTRACT
"Active" Refuges
Can Inhibit the Evolution of Resistance in Insects Towards
Transgenic Insect-Resistant Plants
Barry R.
Pittendrigh, Patrick J. Gaffney, Joseph E. Huesing, David W.
Onstad, Richard T. Roush, and Larry L. Murdock
Negative cross-resistance (NCR)
toxins that hitherto have not been thought to have practical
uses may indeed be useful in the management of resistance
alleles. Practical applications of NCR for pest management have
been limited (i) by the scarcity of high toxicity NCR toxins
among pesticides, (ii) by the lack of systematic methodologies
to discover and develop such toxins, as well as (iii) by the
lack of deployment tactics that would make NCR attractive. Here
we present the concept that NCR toxins can improve the
effectiveness of refuges in delaying the evolution of resistance
by herbivorous insect pests to transgenic host plants containing
insecticidal toxins. In our concept, NCR toxins are deployed in
the refuge, and thus are physically separated from the
transgenic plants containing the primary plant-protectant gene
(PPPG) encoding an insecticidal toxin. Our models show: (i) that
use of NCR toxins in the refuge dramatically delays the increase
in the frequency of resistance alleles in the insect population;
and (ii) that NCR toxins that are only moderately effective in
killing insects resistant to the PPPG can greatly improve the
durability of transgenic insecticidal toxins. Moderately-toxic
NCR toxins are more effective in minimizing resistance
development in the field when they are deployed in the refuge
than when they are pyramided with the PPPG. We explore the
potential strengths and weaknesses of deploying NCR toxins in
refuges. |