UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Compounds produced by sorghum plants to defend against insects could be used as a targeted, nontoxic insect deterrent.
Researchers examined the role of sorghum chemicals called flavonoids in fighting the corn leaf aphid, a tiny blue-green insect that sucks sap from plants.
To defend against pests like the aphids, sorghum has evolved defenses that includes biosynthesis of secondary metabolites, including flavonoids to poison the pests.
The findings indicate flavonoids can potentially be deployed as potent insect deterrents to protect crops, says Surinder Chopra, professor of maize genetics at Penn State who led the research.
“Sorghum plants have evolved to precisely emit compounds offering defenses against harmful predatory insects that threaten them, and yet these chemicals in their defenses don’t hurt beneficial insects,” said Chopra.
“If we could develop nontoxic insecticides, it would be a game changer.”
The science
A previous Penn State study showed that in sorghum, accumulation of these flavonoids is regulated by a gene called yellow seed1 that controls responses to stresses such as fungal pathogens, Chopra said.
In the current research carried out at the Penn State’s Russell E. Larson Agricultural Research Center, researchers grew two nearly identical lines of sorghum — one with a functional y1 gene that produced flavonoids, and the other a mutant called null y1, which did not possess the functional yellow seed1 gene responsible for producing the flavonoids.
When they compared the two lines of plants, researchers found that a significantly higher number of adult corn-leaf aphids colonized null y1 plants compared to the plants with functional y1 gene that produced flavonoids.
The aphids actively fed on the null y1 plants to where some of them showed signs of stress with yellowed leaves. The functional sorghum plants that produced the flavonoids had much lower aphid numbers and showed no ill effects from aphid feeding.
Greenhouse experiments with similar potted sorghum plants demonstrated that the aphids clearly preferred to feed and reproduce on null y1 plants, and the adults produced many more nymphs.
In a companion laboratory experiment, researchers fed two groups of adult aphids diets of sorghum leaf tissues — but to one they added an extract containing the flavonoids. After a few days, most of the aphids that fed on the flavonoid-enriched leaf tissue died and reproduction was curtailed — none of those aphids had nymphs before they succumbed.
Explanation
Perhaps surprisingly, Chopra explained, the flavonoids are not present in the phloem — vascular tissue in plants that conducts the sugars aphids seek — but are in the epidermal cells that form the outermost layer of defense.
When aphids repeatedly probe and puncture the epidermal cells with their stylets, or beaks, they take up the flavonoids that lead to their demise.
What’s next
Chopra, supported by Penn State, has applied for a patent on using flavonoids as insect deterrents.
He pointed out that while much more research needs to be done, the most important consideration is that flavonoids are natural plant products that do not cause any pollution and are not harmful to human or animal health.
This research may be an early step toward developing new phytochemicals for crop defenses, Chopra said.
“How well the flavonoids work against other herbivores is being researched, but we know with corn leaf aphids they are very, very potent,” he said.
The research included work at several institutions and was supported by the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s National Institute of Food and Agriculture.