4.7 Article

Two Odorant-Binding Proteins Involved in the Recognition of Sex Pheromones in Spodoptera litura Larvae

Journal

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.2c04335

Keywords

Spodoptera litura; odorant-binding protein; sex pheromone; larvae behavior; host plants

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31970456]
  2. Natural Science Fund of Education Department of Anhui Province, China [KJ2021ZD0059, KJ2021B10]
  3. Anhui Provincial Natural Science Foundation [2008085MC63]
  4. National College Students' Innovation and Entrepreneurship Training Program [202110373017, 202113620004]
  5. Anhui College Students' Innovation and Entrepreneurship Training Program [202110373108, 202010373096, S202013620012]

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This study found that fourth-instar Spodoptera litura larvae are attracted to cabbage laced with minor sex pheromones, and GOBP2 and OBP7 play a role in this attraction. These findings provide an important basis for exploring the olfactory mechanisms underlying sex pheromone attraction in moth larvae.
Usually, the recognition of sex pheromone signals is restricted to adult moths. Here, our behavioral assay showed that fourth-instar Spodoptera litura larvae are attracted to cabbage laced with minor sex pheromones Z9,E12-tetradecadienyl acetate (Z9,E12-14:Ac) or Z9-tetradecenyl acetate (Z9-14:Ac). Seven odorant-binding proteins (OBPs) were upregulated after exposure to Z9,E12-14:Ac, and one OBP was upregulated after exposure to Z9-14:Ac. Fluorescence competitive binding assays showed that GOBP2 and OBP7 bound to sex pheromones. RNAi treatment significantly downregulated GOBP2 and OBP7 mRNA expression by 70.37 and 63.27%, respectively. The siOBP-treated larvae were not attracted to Z9,E12-14:Ac or Z9-14:Ac, and the corresponding preference indices were significantly lower than those in siGFP-treated larvae. Therefore, we concluded that GOBP2 and OBP7 are involved in the attraction of S. litura larvae to food containing Z9,E12-14:Ac and Z9-14:Ac. These results provide an important basis for exploring the olfactory mechanisms underlying sex pheromone attraction in moth larvae.

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