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Production of Volatile Moth Sex Pheromones in Transgenic Nicotiana benthamiana Plants

Authors :
Rubén Mateos-Fernández
Elena Moreno-Giménez
Silvia Gianoglio
Alfredo Quijano-Rubio
Jose Gavaldá-García
Lucía Estellés
Alba Rubert
José Luis Rambla
Marta Vazquez-Vilar
Estefanía Huet
Asunción Fernández-del-Carmen
Ana Espinosa-Ruiz
Mojca Juteršek
Sandra Vacas
Ismael Navarro
Vicente Navarro-Llopis
Jaime Primo
Diego Orzáez
Source :
BioDesign Research, Vol 2021 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), 2021.

Abstract

Plant-based bioproduction of insect sex pheromones has been proposed as an innovative strategy to increase the sustainability of pest control in agriculture. Here, we describe the engineering of transgenic plants producing (Z)-11-hexadecenol (Z11-16OH) and (Z)-11-hexadecenyl acetate (Z11-16OAc), two main volatile components in many Lepidoptera sex pheromone blends. We assembled multigene DNA constructs encoding the pheromone biosynthetic pathway and stably transformed them into Nicotiana benthamiana plants. The constructs contained the Amyelois transitella AtrΔ11 desaturase gene, the Helicoverpa armigera fatty acyl reductase HarFAR gene, and the Euonymus alatus diacylglycerol acetyltransferase EaDAct gene in different configurations. All the pheromone-producing plants showed dwarf phenotypes, the severity of which correlated with pheromone levels. All but one of the recovered lines produced high levels of Z11-16OH, but very low levels of Z11-16OAc, probably as a result of recurrent truncations at the level of the EaDAct gene. Only one plant line (SxPv1.2) was recovered that harboured an intact pheromone pathway and which produced moderate levels of Z11-16OAc (11.8 μg g-1 FW) and high levels of Z11-16OH (111.4 μg g-1). Z11-16OAc production was accompanied in SxPv1.2 by a partial recovery of the dwarf phenotype. SxPv1.2 was used to estimate the rates of volatile pheromone release, which resulted in 8.48 ng g-1 FW per day for Z11-16OH and 9.44 ng g-1 FW per day for Z11-16OAc. Our results suggest that pheromone release acts as a limiting factor in pheromone biodispenser strategies and establish a roadmap for biotechnological improvements.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
26931257
Volume :
2021
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
BioDesign Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.be83a33cce7741598bfa725d82201f22
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.34133/2021/9891082