New Microbial Insecticide As Potent As BT
Article originally published in in July, 1998
MADISON - By isolating and characterizing the biochemical properties
of a new-found natural insecticide, scientists have taken an important step
toward augmenting the sparse armamentarium of biological pest control.
Writing today (Friday, June 26) in the journal Science, a team of scientists
from the University of Wisconsin-Madison describe the properties of a family
of insecticidal toxins produced by Photorhabdus luminescens, a bacterium
that, in nature, infects and kills insects with the help of a tiny worm
or nematode.
The toxins produced by Photorhabdus are active against a wide range of
insects and are at least as potent as the insect-killing poisons produced
by Bacillus thuringiensis or Bt, the reigning king of natural insecticides,
according to Richard ffrench-Constant, a UW-Madison professor of toxicology
in the department of entomology and the principal author of the new study.
"These new toxins are highly efficient killers of insects and they
hold for the future the same promise first revealed in Bt more than 30 years
ago," said ffrench-Constant.
Widely used for decades in the home, in forests and on farms, Bt is also
a bacterium and is considered to be a safe, effective and environmentally
benign weapon in the war on insect pests. Moreover, in the last few years
the genes that govern the production of the Bt toxin have been moved from
the bacterium into crop plants, which this year account for 20 percent of
the U.S. cotton crop and nearly 10 million acres of transgenic corn, mostly
in the Midwest.
As a form of biological pest control, Bt is the only bacterium from which
widespread commercial insecticidal applications have been possible, giving
it, in effect, a microbial monopoly on insect control worth hundreds of
millions of dollars.
But the development of new, naturally occurring insecticides has taken
on new urgency in recent years as resistance to Bt has been reported in
some populations of insect pests.
"Potential resistance to Bt is now a big issue," said ffrench-Constant.
"Developing new biological agents for the control of insect pests is
therefore essential."
Photorhabdus, ffrench-Constant suggests, may become an important alternative
to Bt, or could be deployed in concert with Bt to prolong the effective
life of both biological insecticides by delaying the evolution of resistant
strains of insect pests. He described the deployment of Bt transgenic crops
as the biggest experiment in natural selection for insecticide resistance
since the introduction of chemical pesticides 50 years ago.
"What we have with Photorhabdus and other bacteria is a natural
source, almost an infinite variety" of toxic molecules, says ffrench-Constant.
"We can't afford to hook ourselves to a single bacterium or a single
toxin."
In nature, Photorhabdus bacteria live inside the guts of nematodes that
invade insects. Once inside an insect host, the bacteria are released from
the nematode, kill the insect, and set up rounds of bacterial and nematode
reproduction that turns the insect into a "protein soup," food
for large numbers of nematodes.
Moreover, the insect corpses left behind glow in the dark as the microbe
produces luminescent proteins in addition to potent insecticides.
Previous studies have shown that, in concentrated doses, the toxin can
be used as a spray or fed directly to insects. The greatest potential application,
however, lies in transferring the toxin-producing genes from the bacteria
to crop plants
The incentive to confer crop plants with their own insecticides is huge.
Farmers now spend more than $575 million annually on chemical pesticides
to protect corn alone.
In addition to ffrench-Constant, co-authors of the Wisconsin study include
David Bowen, Thomas A. Rocheleau, Michael Blackburn, Olga Andreev, Elena
Golubeva and Rohit Bhartia.
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