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Throwing Brazilian strains into the melting pot of P. xylostella resistance to Bacillus thuringiensis.

The resistance of pest insects to biopesticides based on the bacterium Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) is normally associated with changes to the receptors involved in the mechanism of action of the pesticidal proteins produced by Bt. In some strains of Plutella xylostella (the diamondback moth) resistance has evolved through a signalling mechanism in which the genes encoding the receptor proteins are downregulated whereas in others it has been linked to structural changes in the receptors themselves. One such well characterized mutation is in the ABCC2 gene indicating that changes to this protein can result in resistance. However other studies have found that knocking out this protein does not result in a significant level of resistance. In this study we wanted to test the hypothesis that constitutive receptor downregulation is the major cause of Bt resistance in P. xylostella and that mutations in the now poorly expressed receptor genes may not contribute significantly to the phenotype. To that end we investigated the expression of a receptor (ABCC2) and the major regulator of the signalling pathway (MAP4K4) in two resistant and four susceptible strains. No correlation was found between expression levels and susceptibility; however, a frameshift mutation was identified in the ABCC2 receptor in a newly characterized resistant strain.

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