Abstract

Adoption of biotech crops engineered to express insecticidal toxins from Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) has revolutionized insect pest control in agriculture. For continuing effective application and development of the environmentally friendly Bt biotechnology, it is fundamental to understand pathways of toxicity of Bt toxins in insects. In this study, mutations were introduced in the midgut cadherin gene in the cabbage looper, Trichoplusia ni, by CRISPR/Cas9 mutagenesis. T. ni strains with mutations in the genes of two major receptors for Bt toxins, the midgut cadherin and ABCC2, and three Cry1A toxins with shared and differential midgut binding sites were used as an experimental system to dissect the roles of the cadherin and ABCC2 in the pathways of toxicity of Bt toxins. Results from assays of responses of the T. ni strains to different Bt toxins revealed that the cadherin and ABCC2 play independent roles in the mode of action of Cry1A toxins and that Bt toxins exert insecticidal activity through multiple redundant pathways of toxicity in insects. Besides the cadherin and ABCC2 pathways, there exists an additional major pathway of toxicity to be identified for Cry1Aa. The results also confirmed that the toxicity of Cry2Ab involves neither the cadherin nor the ABCC2 protein. The multiple pathway model for Bt toxins clarified from this study provided new insights into the molecular modes of action of Bt toxins and mechanisms of insect resistance to Bt toxins.

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