Plant secondary metabolites impact the susceptibility of caterpillars to
an entomovirus
Abstract
Plant-mediated effects on the susceptibility of insect herbivores to
entomoviruses are well recognized, but the mechanisms by which plant
secondary metabolites impact susceptibility are poorly understood. With
widely targeted metabolomics analyses of three plants (Glycine max,
Brassica oleracea, Ipomoea aquatica) that caused significant differences
in caterpillar (Spodoptera exigua) viral susceptibility, we found four
plant phenolics (genistein, kaempferol, quercitrin, coumarin) that
increased susceptibility. Subsequently, we analyzed transcriptomes of
caterpillars treated with nucleopolyhedrovirus (NPV) alone or with one
the four plant phenolics to examine differences in metabolic pathways.
We found that phenolic treatments caused significant differences in
genes up-or-down regulating cytochrome P450, glutathione S-transferase
and consistently caused significant down-regulation of the CXE18 gene
regulating antennal esterase in caterpillars. This study found four
phytochemicals can be potential candidate NPV synergist and sheds light
on the mechanisms driving insect susceptibility to entomoviruses.