Abstract

Plant-parasitic nematodes pose a significant threat to agriculture causing annual yield losses worth more than 100 billion US$. Nematode control often involves the use of nematicides, but many of them including non-selective fumigants have been phased out, particularly due to ecotoxicological concerns. Thus new control strategies are urgently needed. Spirotetramat (SPT) is used as phloem-mobile systemic insecticide targeting acetyl-CoA carboxylase (ACC) of pest insects and mites upon foliar application. However, in nematodes the mode of action of SPT and its effect on their development have not been studied so far. Our studies revealed that SPT known to be activated in planta to SPT-enol acts as a developmental inhibitor of the free-living nematode Caenorhabditis elegans and the plant-parasitic nematode Heterodera schachtii. Exposure to SPT-enol leads to larval arrest and disruption of the life cycle. Furthermore, SPT-enol inhibits nematode ACC activity, affects storage lipids and fatty acid composition. Silencing of H. schachtii ACC by RNAi induced similar phenotypes and thus mimics the effects of SPT-enol, supporting the conclusion that SPT-enol acts on nematodes by inhibiting ACC. Our studies demonstrated that the inhibition of de novo lipid biosynthesis by interfering with nematode ACC is a new nematicidal mode of action addressed by SPT, a well-known systemic insecticide for sucking pest control.

Highlights

  • Nematodes is seen controversial by the public due to the potential damage caused to the environment and nontarget organisms

  • acetyl-CoA carboxylase (ACC) activity is highly responsive to the overall energy status of a cell which is in turn regulated by nutritional cues

  • The signal transduction depends on AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) that in times of fasting keeps ACC phosphorylated and inactive

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Summary

Introduction

Nematodes is seen controversial by the public due to the potential damage caused to the environment and nontarget organisms. SPT-enol suppresses fatty acid biosynthesis by inhibiting the action of acetyl-CoA carboxylase (ACC)[8,9]. To test for an acute toxic effect of SPT-enol we examined its impact on non-developing stages of nematodes, i.e. C_elegans starved L1 and H. schachtii J2 larvae. SPT-enol inhibited C. elegans development in a concentration dependent manner, causing early arrest at stage L1.

Results
Conclusion

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