Effect of low doses of precocene on reproduction and gene expression in green peach aphid

•We tested whether low-doses of precocene, an antagonist of JH, would stimulate Myzus persicae reproduction.•Nymphs treated with certain concentrations of precocene had up to 2-fold increased reproductive outputs when adults.•Treatments had no measurable effects on JH levels in adults.•Up to 300-fol...

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Veröffentlicht in:Chemosphere (Oxford) 2015-06, Vol.128, p.245-251
Hauptverfasser: Ayyanath, Murali-Mohan, Scott-Dupree, Cynthia D., Cutler, G. Christopher
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•We tested whether low-doses of precocene, an antagonist of JH, would stimulate Myzus persicae reproduction.•Nymphs treated with certain concentrations of precocene had up to 2-fold increased reproductive outputs when adults.•Treatments had no measurable effects on JH levels in adults.•Up to 300-fold increased expression of some genes was observed.•There was no clear relationship between gene expression and reproductive responses. Insect reproduction can be stimulated by exposure to sublethal doses of insecticide that kill the same insects at high doses. This bi-phasic dose response to a stressor is known as hormesis and has been demonstrated with many different insect–insecticide models. The specific mechanisms of the increased reproduction in insects following sublethal pesticide exposure are unknown, but may be related to juvenile hormone (JH), which has a major role in regulation of metamorphosis and reproductive development in insects. We tested the hypothesis that exposure to sublethal concentrations of precocene, an antagonist of JH, would not result in stimulated reproductive outputs in the green peach aphid, Myzus persicae, as can be demonstrated with many neurotoxic insecticides. We also measured JH titers and the expression of various developmental (FPPS I), stress response (Hsp60), and dispersal (OSD, TOL and ANT) genes in aphids following exposure to the same precocene treatments. We found that when aphid nymphs were treated with certain sublethal concentrations of precocene, 1.5- to 2-fold increased reproductive stimulation occurred when they became adults, but this effect subsided in the following generation. Precocene treatments to nymphs resulted in no measurable effects on JH levels in subsequent reproducing adults. Although we detected major effects on gene expression following some precocene treatments (e.g. 100- to 300-fold increased expression of some genes), there were no clear relationships between gene expression and reproductive responses for a given treatment.
ISSN:0045-6535
1879-1298
DOI:10.1016/j.chemosphere.2015.01.061