Title
Temporal variation of RAPD-PCR phenotype composition of the grain aphid sitobion avenae (Hemiptera: Aphididae) on wheat: The role of hydroxamic acids
Date Issued
01 January 2002
Access level
metadata only access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Universidad de Chile
Abstract
Hydroxamic acids (Hx) contained in wheat are active mutagens which play an important role in the defence of the plant against aphids. Random amplified polymorphic DNA-polymerase chain reaction (RAPD-PCR) dominant markers were used to assess genetic variability in the aphid Sitobion avenae (Fabricius) in relation to hydroxamic acid levels in their host-plants. Colonies of aphids belonging to a single RAPD-PCR profile were grown on different host-plants differing in their Hx content under greenhouse conditions. The RAPD-PCR phenotypic pattern showed the appearance of two new RAPD-PCR variants after four to five generations of exposure to wheat cv. Chagual (high Hx levels), one after exposure to wheat cv. Huayún (low Hx levels), and none after exposure to oat (lacking Hx). Differential appearance of new RAPD-PCR aphid phenotypes also occurred on field-grown wheat. While the overall phenotypic 'richness' diminished during the season, the number of RAPD-PCR phenotypes decreased on cv. Huayún and increased on cv. Chagual. The preferential appearance in the field and in the greenhouse of new RAPD-PCR phenotypes of S. avenae on cv. Chagual is discussed on the basis of mutagenesis induced by hydroxamic acids and by the products of their transformation within the aphid. Aphid abundance is interpreted in terms of antixenosis and antibiosis by hydroxamic acids. The appearance on cv. Chagual of phenotypes first detected on cv. Huayún was accounted for by intercrop migrations.
Start page
25
End page
33
Volume
92
Issue
1
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Tecnología de modificación genética
Agricultura
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-0036202152
PubMed ID
Source
Bulletin of Entomological Research
ISSN of the container
00074853
Sponsor(s)
This work was funded by FONDECYT grant 2000-060 to C.C.F. and by the Presidential Chair in Sciences awarded to H.M.N, and is part of the activities of the Center for Advanced Stu dies in Ecology and Research in Biodiversity supported by the Millennium Science Initiative (grant No. P99-103-F ICM). R.L.-M. was supported by a LANBIO (Latin American Network for Research on Bioactive Natural Compounds) fellowship during the development of this work. We thank Dr C.C. Ramírez for help with the statistical analysis, Ms M. Cisternas for help with the initial molecular screenings, Ms L. Muñoz for help with insect and plant maintenance, and Dr H.H. Loxdale and an anonymous reviewer for very pertinent and constru ctive comments on the manuscript.
Sources of information:
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