Abstract
AbstractVitellogenins are essential for the development and fecundity of insects, but these proteins may also betray them, as we show here. We found that the small N-terminal subunit of vitellogenins of the planthopper Nilaparvata lugens (NlVgN) triggers strong defense responses in rice plants when it enters the plant during feeding or oviposition by the insect. The defenses induced by NlVgN in plants not only decreased the hatching rate of N. lugens eggs, but also induced volatile emissions in rice plants, which rendered them attractive to a common egg parasitoid. VgN of other planthoppers were found to trigger the same defense responses in rice. We further show that VgN deposited during planthopper feeding compared to during oviposition induces a somewhat different response, probably targeting the appropriate developmental stage of the insect. The key importance of VgN for planthopper performance precludes possible evolutionary adaptions to prevent detection by rice plants.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory