Publication | Open Access
A transgenic approach for controlling Lygus in cotton
84
Citations
28
References
2016
Year
EngineeringGeneticsEntomologyMolecular BiologyTransgenic ApproachImportant PestsBiosynthesisBiorational PesticidePlant BiologyLygus SpeciesAlternative Protein SourcePest ManagementAgricultural BiotechnologyIntegrated Plant ProtectionBiologyNatural SciencesPesticide ResistanceCrop ProtectionBiotechnologyGenetic EngineeringCommercial Bacillus ThuringiensisProtein EngineeringMicrobiologySymbiosis
Lygus species of plant-feeding insects have emerged as economically important pests of cotton in the United States. These species are not controlled by commercial Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) cotton varieties resulting in economic losses and increased application of insecticide. Previously, a Bt crystal protein (Cry51Aa2) was reported with insecticidal activity against Lygus spp. However, transgenic cotton plants expressing this protein did not exhibit effective protection from Lygus feeding damage. Here we employ various optimization strategies, informed in part by protein crystallography and modelling, to identify limited amino-acid substitutions in Cry51Aa2 that increase insecticidal activity towards Lygus spp. by >200-fold. Transgenic cotton expressing the variant protein, Cry51Aa2.834_16, reduce populations of Lygus spp. up to 30-fold in whole-plant caged field trials. One transgenic event, designated MON88702, has been selected for further development of cotton varieties that could potentially reduce or eliminate insecticide application for control of Lygus and the associated environmental impacts.
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