Adaptation by copy number variation increases insecticide resistance in the fall armyworm

Understanding the genetic basis of insecticide resistance is a key topic in agricultural ecology. The adaptive evolution of multi-copy detoxification genes has been interpreted as a cause of insecticide resistance, yet the same pattern can also be generated by the adaptation to host-plant defense to...

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Veröffentlicht in:Communications biology 2020-11, Vol.3 (1), p.664-664, Article 664
Hauptverfasser: Gimenez, Sylvie, Abdelgaffar, Heba, Goff, Gaelle Le, Hilliou, Frédérique, Blanco, Carlos A., Hänniger, Sabine, Bretaudeau, Anthony, Legeai, Fabrice, Nègre, Nicolas, Jurat-Fuentes, Juan Luis, d’Alençon, Emmanuelle, Nam, Kiwoong
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Understanding the genetic basis of insecticide resistance is a key topic in agricultural ecology. The adaptive evolution of multi-copy detoxification genes has been interpreted as a cause of insecticide resistance, yet the same pattern can also be generated by the adaptation to host-plant defense toxins. In this study, we tested in the fall armyworm, Spodoptera frugiperda (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae), if adaptation by copy number variation caused insecticide resistance in two geographically distinct populations with different levels of resistance and the two host-plant strains. We observed a significant allelic differentiation of genomic copy number variations between the two geographic populations, but not between host-plant strains. A locus with positively selected copy number variation included a CYP gene cluster. Toxicological tests supported a central role for CYP enzymes in deltamethrin resistance. Our results indicate that copy number variation of detoxification genes might be responsible for insecticide resistance in fall armyworm and that evolutionary forces causing insecticide resistance could be independent of host-plant adaptation. Sylvie Gimenez et al. compare adaptation by copy number variation in two geographically distinct populations of the fall armyworm and find a relationship between copy number variation and insecticide resistance. The authors perform toxicological tests to confirm a role of the CYP gene cluster in insecticide resistance and suggest that evolutionary forces causing insecticide resistance can be independent of host-plant adaptation.
ISSN:2399-3642
2399-3642
DOI:10.1038/s42003-020-01382-6