Abstract

Phytochemicals are toxic to insects, but their insecticidal efficiencies are usually low compared to synthetic insecticides. Understanding the mechanism of insect adaptation to phytochemicals will provide guidance for increasing their efficacy. Reduced glutathione (GSH) is a scavenger of reactive oxygen species (ROS) induced by phytochemicals. However, in insects, the pathway of GSH biosynthesis in response to phytochemicals is unclear. We found that exposure to 0.5% indole-3-methanol (I3C), xanthotoxin, and rotenone (ROT) significantly retarded the growth of Spodoptera litura larvae. The oxidative stress in S. litura larvae exposed to phytochemicals was increased. The up-regulation of glutamate cysteine ligase but not glutathione reductase revealed that the de novo synthesis pathway is responsible for GSH synthesis in phytochemical-treated larvae. Treatment with the inhibitor (BSO) of γ-glutamylcysteine synthetase (gclc), a subunit of glutamate cysteine ligase, resulted in decreases of GSH levels and GST activities, increases of ROS levels in I3C-treated larvae, which finally caused midgut necrosis and larval death. Treatment with BSO or I3C alone did not cause larval death. The addition of GSH could partly reduce the influence of I3C and BSO on S. litura growth. Nilaparvata lugens gclc RNAi confirmed the result of BSO treatment in S. litura. N. lugens gclc RNAi significantly increased the mortality of ROT-sprayed N. lugens, in which ROS levels were significantly increased. All data indicate that gclc is involved in insect response to phytochemical treatment. Treatment with dsgclc will increase the insecticidal efficacy of plant-derived compounds.

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