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Plants as biofactories for insect pheromones : Production of aphid and bark beetle pheromones in plants

Ontiveros Cisneros, Abraham LU orcid (2024)
Abstract
Crop pests, such as aphids and bark beetles, represent a big challenge for agriculture worldwide. Due to their high adaptability and more suitable conditions because of climate change, they can thrive on a large number of hosts. One of the strategies to control the population of these pests in agricultural areas is the use of pheromones, either to lure them, repel them or to attract predators as a way of biological control. In the case of aphids, nepetalactol and nepetalactone have proven to be powerful attractants to aphids and to their predators. For bark beetles, which encompass a broad number
of beetle species, some of the most relevant compounds are ipsdienol, cis-verbenol, trans-verbenol and 2-methyl-3-buten-2-ol. The aim of this... (More)
Crop pests, such as aphids and bark beetles, represent a big challenge for agriculture worldwide. Due to their high adaptability and more suitable conditions because of climate change, they can thrive on a large number of hosts. One of the strategies to control the population of these pests in agricultural areas is the use of pheromones, either to lure them, repel them or to attract predators as a way of biological control. In the case of aphids, nepetalactol and nepetalactone have proven to be powerful attractants to aphids and to their predators. For bark beetles, which encompass a broad number
of beetle species, some of the most relevant compounds are ipsdienol, cis-verbenol, trans-verbenol and 2-methyl-3-buten-2-ol. The aim of this project is to produce these compounds in plant species using genetic and metabolic engineering tools. The feasibility of this approach is due to the capacity of plants
to synthesize the precursors for all these compounds from their secondary metabolism. Considering this, plants could represent a good alternative to either act as natural dispensers or lures of insect pheromones, or to act as biofactories and avoid the chemical synthesis of these compounds.
Paper I describes the methodology to work with Camelina using antibiotic-selection methods to generate stable transformants. As this plant system was considered for this project, it was decided to establish the optimal dose for antibiotic selection corresponding to commonly used plasmids in Arabidopsis and grass transformation. mRNA expression from antibiotic selected plants is shown, as well as effective methods for seed sterilization and crossing.
Paper II describes the research done regarding the genetic engineering of a functional nepetalactol synthetic pathway into plants along with a major latex protein like (MLPL) enzyme. Results show transient expression of these enzymes in N. benthamiana caused production of nepetalactone, a ketone product of the oxidation of nepetalactol, without external supplementation with pathway substrates. In addition, nepetalactone production was achieved in stably transformed Camelina. These results provide the basis of a transferable nepetalactone producing pathway using a single plasmid vector into plants.
Paper III presents the research regarding the genetic engineering of metabolic pathways for the biosynthesis of bark beetle aggregation pheromones 2-methyl-3-buten-3-ol, ipsdienol, cis-verbenol and trans-verbenol. Results show Arabidopsis thaliana can produce intermediates β-myrcene (ipsdienol
pathway) and α-pinene (verbenol pathway), and the final products cis-verbenol and trans-verbenol. Verbenone, an anti-aggregation pheromone, was also produced, being the result of verbenol autooxidation. (Less)
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author
supervisor
opponent
  • Professor Gershenzon, Jonathan, Max Planck Institute for Chemical Ecology, Jena.
organization
publishing date
type
Thesis
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Pheromone production, plant genetic engineering, multigene cloning, Aphid, Bark beetle, Nepetalactone, verbenol
pages
66 pages
publisher
Lund University, Faculty of Science
defense location
A213 Biology Lecture hall.
defense date
2024-09-27 09:00:00
ISBN
978-91-8104-090-6
978-91-8104-089-0
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
dc87a5fb-6df5-46c6-85c8-a8fbfd2ad32f
date added to LUP
2024-09-03 01:42:51
date last changed
2024-09-04 09:00:08
@phdthesis{dc87a5fb-6df5-46c6-85c8-a8fbfd2ad32f,
  abstract     = {{Crop pests, such as aphids and bark beetles, represent a big challenge for agriculture worldwide. Due to their high adaptability and more suitable conditions because of climate change, they can thrive on a large number of hosts. One of the strategies to control the population of these pests in agricultural areas is the use of pheromones, either to lure them, repel them or to attract predators as a way of biological control. In the case of aphids, nepetalactol and nepetalactone have proven to be powerful attractants to aphids and to their predators. For bark beetles, which encompass a broad number<br/>of beetle species, some of the most relevant compounds are ipsdienol, cis-verbenol, trans-verbenol and 2-methyl-3-buten-2-ol. The aim of this project is to produce these compounds in plant species using genetic and metabolic engineering tools. The feasibility of this approach is due to the capacity of plants<br/>to synthesize the precursors for all these compounds from their secondary metabolism. Considering this, plants could represent a good alternative to either act as natural dispensers or lures of insect pheromones, or to act as biofactories and avoid the chemical synthesis of these compounds.<br/>Paper I describes the methodology to work with Camelina using antibiotic-selection methods to generate stable transformants. As this plant system was considered for this project, it was decided to establish the optimal dose for antibiotic selection corresponding to commonly used plasmids in Arabidopsis and grass transformation. mRNA expression from antibiotic selected plants is shown, as well as effective methods for seed sterilization and crossing.<br/>Paper II describes the research done regarding the genetic engineering of a functional nepetalactol synthetic pathway into plants along with a major latex protein like (MLPL) enzyme. Results show transient expression of these enzymes in N. benthamiana caused production of nepetalactone, a ketone product of the oxidation of nepetalactol, without external supplementation with pathway substrates. In addition, nepetalactone production was achieved in stably transformed Camelina. These results provide the basis of a transferable nepetalactone producing pathway using a single plasmid vector into plants.<br/>Paper III presents the research regarding the genetic engineering of metabolic pathways for the biosynthesis of bark beetle aggregation pheromones 2-methyl-3-buten-3-ol, ipsdienol, cis-verbenol and trans-verbenol. Results show Arabidopsis thaliana can produce intermediates β-myrcene (ipsdienol<br/>pathway) and α-pinene (verbenol pathway), and the final products cis-verbenol and trans-verbenol. Verbenone, an anti-aggregation pheromone, was also produced, being the result of verbenol autooxidation.}},
  author       = {{Ontiveros Cisneros, Abraham}},
  isbn         = {{978-91-8104-090-6}},
  keywords     = {{Pheromone production; plant genetic engineering; multigene cloning; Aphid; Bark beetle; Nepetalactone; verbenol}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{Lund University, Faculty of Science}},
  school       = {{Lund University}},
  title        = {{Plants as biofactories for insect pheromones : Production of aphid and bark beetle pheromones in plants}},
  year         = {{2024}},
}