Acquisition of Cry1Ac protein by non-target arthropods in Bt soybean fields.

Soybean tissue and arthropods were collected in Bt soybean fields in China at different times during the growing season to investigate the exposure of arthropods to the plant-produced Cry1Ac toxin and the transmission of the toxin within the food web. Samples from 52 arthropod species/taxa belonging...

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Main Authors: Huilin Yu, Jörg Romeis, Yunhe Li, Xiangju Li, Kongming Wu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4128818?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-19df538faa464675a1b88f2e68a777602020-11-24T21:45:44ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-0198e10397310.1371/journal.pone.0103973Acquisition of Cry1Ac protein by non-target arthropods in Bt soybean fields.Huilin YuJörg RomeisYunhe LiXiangju LiKongming WuSoybean tissue and arthropods were collected in Bt soybean fields in China at different times during the growing season to investigate the exposure of arthropods to the plant-produced Cry1Ac toxin and the transmission of the toxin within the food web. Samples from 52 arthropod species/taxa belonging to 42 families in 10 orders were analysed for their Cry1Ac content using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). Among the 22 species/taxa for which three samples were analysed, toxin concentration was highest in the grasshopper Atractomorpha sinensis and represented about 50% of the concentration in soybean leaves. Other species/taxa did not contain detectable toxin or contained a concentration that was between 1 and 10% of that detected in leaves. These Cry1Ac-positive arthropods included a number of mesophyll-feeding Hemiptera, a cicadellid, a curculionid beetle and, among the predators, a thomisid spider and an unidentified predatory bug belonging to the Anthocoridae. Within an arthropod species/taxon, the Cry1Ac content sometimes varied between life stages (nymphs/larvae vs. adults) and sampling dates (before, during, and after flowering). Our study is the first to provide information on Cry1Ac-expression levels in soybean plants and Cry1Ac concentrations in non-target arthropods in Chinese soybean fields. The data will be useful for assessing the risk of non-target arthropod exposure to Cry1Ac in soybean.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4128818?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Huilin Yu
Jörg Romeis
Yunhe Li
Xiangju Li
Kongming Wu
spellingShingle Huilin Yu
Jörg Romeis
Yunhe Li
Xiangju Li
Kongming Wu
Acquisition of Cry1Ac protein by non-target arthropods in Bt soybean fields.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Huilin Yu
Jörg Romeis
Yunhe Li
Xiangju Li
Kongming Wu
author_sort Huilin Yu
title Acquisition of Cry1Ac protein by non-target arthropods in Bt soybean fields.
title_short Acquisition of Cry1Ac protein by non-target arthropods in Bt soybean fields.
title_full Acquisition of Cry1Ac protein by non-target arthropods in Bt soybean fields.
title_fullStr Acquisition of Cry1Ac protein by non-target arthropods in Bt soybean fields.
title_full_unstemmed Acquisition of Cry1Ac protein by non-target arthropods in Bt soybean fields.
title_sort acquisition of cry1ac protein by non-target arthropods in bt soybean fields.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2014-01-01
description Soybean tissue and arthropods were collected in Bt soybean fields in China at different times during the growing season to investigate the exposure of arthropods to the plant-produced Cry1Ac toxin and the transmission of the toxin within the food web. Samples from 52 arthropod species/taxa belonging to 42 families in 10 orders were analysed for their Cry1Ac content using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). Among the 22 species/taxa for which three samples were analysed, toxin concentration was highest in the grasshopper Atractomorpha sinensis and represented about 50% of the concentration in soybean leaves. Other species/taxa did not contain detectable toxin or contained a concentration that was between 1 and 10% of that detected in leaves. These Cry1Ac-positive arthropods included a number of mesophyll-feeding Hemiptera, a cicadellid, a curculionid beetle and, among the predators, a thomisid spider and an unidentified predatory bug belonging to the Anthocoridae. Within an arthropod species/taxon, the Cry1Ac content sometimes varied between life stages (nymphs/larvae vs. adults) and sampling dates (before, during, and after flowering). Our study is the first to provide information on Cry1Ac-expression levels in soybean plants and Cry1Ac concentrations in non-target arthropods in Chinese soybean fields. The data will be useful for assessing the risk of non-target arthropod exposure to Cry1Ac in soybean.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4128818?pdf=render
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AT jorgromeis acquisitionofcry1acproteinbynontargetarthropodsinbtsoybeanfields
AT yunheli acquisitionofcry1acproteinbynontargetarthropodsinbtsoybeanfields
AT xiangjuli acquisitionofcry1acproteinbynontargetarthropodsinbtsoybeanfields
AT kongmingwu acquisitionofcry1acproteinbynontargetarthropodsinbtsoybeanfields
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