Abstract

The influence of various host plants on glutathione S-transferase activity was studied in the fall armyworm, Spodoptera frugiperda (J. E. Smith). Fall armyworm larvae were maintained on a semidefined artificial diet until the end of the fifth instar. The newly molted sixth instar larvae were then fed fresh leaves of various host plants for 2 days prior to glutathione S-transferase assays using 3,4-dichloronitrobenzene as substrate. The order of the midgut glutathione S-transferase activity of larvae after the worms fed on these plants was: mustard > turnip > cowpeas > peanuts > cotton > corn > cucumber > potato > Bermudagrass > millet > sorghum > soybeans. The difference in the transferase activity between soybean- and mustard-fed larvae was 10-fold. Kinetic study revealed a quantitative, but no qualitative difference in the glutathione S-transferase between soybean- and cowpea-fed larvae. Monoterpenes, such as α-pinene, β-pinene, menthol, and peppermint oil, had no effect on the enzyme. Cowpea-fed larvae were more tolerant of the insecticides diazinon, methamidophos, and methyl parathion than soybean-fed larvae were. These new observations help explain what has been happening in the field and might be of use in the development of pest management programs.

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