Male-specific volatile components released by the banana weevil, Cosmopolites sordidus Gen~ar, from Australia have been identified as (1S,3R,5R,7S)-1 -ethyl-3,5,7-trimethyl-2,8-dioxabieyclo[3.2.1 ]octane and the 7R-epimer (as a minor component) by synthesis and enantioseleetive gas chromatography.
Deleterious effects of plant cystatins against the banana weevil Cosmopolites sordidus
✍ Scribed by Andrew Kiggundu; Josephine Muchwezi; Christell Van der Vyver; Altus Viljoen; Juan Vorster; Urte Schlüter; Karl Kunert; Dominique Michaud
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2009
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 203 KB
- Volume
- 73
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0739-4462
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✦ Synopsis
Abstract
The general potential of plant cystatins for the development of insect‐resistant transgenic plants still remains to be established given the natural ability of several insects to compensate for the loss of digestive cysteine protease activities. Here we assessed the potential of cystatins for the development of banana lines resistant to the banana weevil Cosmopolites sordidus, a major pest of banana and plantain in Africa. Protease inhibitory assays were conducted with protein and methylcoumarin (MCA) peptide substrates to measure the inhibitory efficiency of different cystatins in vitro, followed by a diet assay with cystatin‐infiltrated banana stem disks to monitor the impact of two plant cystatins, oryzacystatin I (OC‐I, or OsCYS1) and papaya cystatin (CpCYS1), on the overall growth rate of weevil larvae. As observed earlier for other Coleoptera, banana weevils produce a variety of proteases for dietary protein digestion, including in particular Z‐Phe‐Arg‐MCA‐hydrolyzing (cathepsin L–like) and Z‐Arg‐Arg‐MCA‐hydrolyzing (cathepsin B–like) proteases active in mildly acidic conditions. Both enzyme populations were sensitive to the cysteine protease inhibitor E‐64 and to different plant cystatins including OsCYS1. In line with the broad inhibitory effects of cystatins, OsCYS1 and CpCYS1 caused an important growth delay in young larvae developing for 10 days in cystatin‐infiltrated banana stem disks. These promising results, which illustrate the susceptibility of C. sordidus to plant cystatins, are discussed in the light of recent hypotheses suggesting a key role for cathepsin B–like enzymes as a determinant for resistance or susceptibility to plant cystatins in Coleoptera. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
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## Abstract The asymmetric synthesis of (1__S__,3__R__,5__R__,7__S__)‐(+)‐sordidin and 7‐__epi__‐(1__S__,3__R__,5__R__,7__R__)‐(–)‐sordidin, both components of the natural male‐produced aggregation pheromone of the banana weevil __Cosmopolites sordidus__ (Germar), starting from 2,2‐dimethyl‐1,3‐dio