Proceedings of the XLV Italian Society of Agricultural
Genetics - SIGA Annual Congress
Salsomaggiore Terme, Italy - 26/29 September, 2001
ISBN 88-900622-1-5
Poster Abstract
TOMATO PLANTS TRANSGENIC FOR AN ARABIDOPSIS
THALIANA CYSTEIN PROTEINASE INHIBITOR (ATCYS)
IMPAIR THE LIFE CYCLE OF
HELICOVERPA ARMIGERA HÜB
SPERANZA
S.*, CACCIA R.**, FONZO V.**, PUCCI C.*, SORESSI G.P.**
*
Dipartimento di Protezione delle Piante, Università degli Studi della
Tuscia, Via S.C. de Lellis snc, 01100 Viterbo, Italy
speranza@unitus.it
**
Dipartimento di Agrobiologia e Agrochimica, Sezione di Genetica,
Università degli Studi della Tuscia, Via S.C. de Lellis snc, 01100
Viterbo, Italy
soressi@unitus.it
cystein proteinase inhibitor, tomato, Helicoverpa
armigera, insect resistance
Atcys tomato
(Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.) transgenic plants,
expressing a cystein proteinase inhibition level double than the untransformed
control (Speranza et al. in press), were used for in vivo
assays with H. armigera larvae. This insect pest, extremely
polyphagous, has recently caused severe damages to the outdoor tomato crop due
to the dropping of infested young fruits and to fruit rotting because of the
larval galleries.
Plants of
the cv. Riogrande (RIG) and of the corresponding Atcys
homozygous transgenic line (BG-106) were grown in greenhouse and leaves
utilized for feeding H. armigera larvae,
reared for four days with artificial diet. The recorded data were larval weight
(every two days until the cocoon stage), cocoon sex and morphometric traits,
number of adults emerged from the cocoon, number of layed and hatched eggs. The
mean weight was generally higher when larvae were fed with BG-106 leaves. By
subdividing in three periods the larval life, no difference in mortality was
observed between larvae reared with control (RIG) and with BG-106 leaves. The percentage of adults
emerged from the cocoon was 81% and 76% for the control and BG-106
respectively. The sex ratio (males/females) was in favour of the female sex
both for the RIG (0.87) and BG-106 (0.73) cocoons. On average, the fertility
(number of layed eggs) of the BG-106 fed females was 33% lower than the
control. By considering the percentage of hatched eggs (emerged larvae), the
value obtained was 6.8% for BG-106 against 11% for RIG.
According to
these data, in Atcys transgenic tomato (BG-106), a level of cystein proteinase
inhibition double than the untransformed control, is sufficient to negatively
influence the H. armigera biological cycle, even if the weight
of the larvae fed with the BG-106 leaves is on average higher than the control
(RIG). The last datum is in agreement with similar experiments reported in
literature where the effect of
proteinase inhibitors is tested in different host-pest systems.