1. Introduction
Vegetative insecticidal proteins (Vips) have earned an important role in modern agriculture due to their ability to control lepidopteran pests that damage crops and impact yield. As their name indicates, Vip proteins are produced during the vegetative growth phase of
Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt), the same soil dwelling bacterium that produce delta endotoxins found in crystalline parasporal inclusions, known as Cry proteins. Unlike Cry proteins, Vip insecticidal proteins are secreted from Bt cells and members of the Vip3A subfamily demonstrate potent activity on Cry resistant insects [
1,
2,
3,
4]. Thus, Vip3A proteins represent a mode of action different to Cry proteins in commercial cotton and corn crops [
5]. Since their identification in 1996 [
6], Vip3 research has focused on the characterization of novel Vip3 proteins and their function [
7]. The Crickmore Bt database lists 14 members of the Vip3 family with ten proteins comprising the Vip3A subfamily, three Vip3B proteins, and one protein representing the Vip3C family at less than or equal to 95% sequence identity [
8]. The overwhelming majority of investigative work has been performed on the Vip3A subfamily as these proteins have demonstrated potent activity against spodopteran insects, a genus found to be less susceptible to several Cry proteins. Thus, this family could be valuable for the development of stacked insecticidal traits.
It is not surprising that the characterization of a multitude of Vip3A proteins has revealed differences in insecticidal spectrum despite a relatively high degree of sequence homology. The sequence diversity found within the Vip3A family is biased towards the C-terminus. Our group has previously demonstrated that exchange of the C-terminal 589 amino acids of Vip3Bc1 with the corresponding region of Vip3Ab1 directs insecticidal activity towards Vip3Ab1 target insects [
9]. However, there was a notable loss of lethal activity suggesting that these chimeric proteins may lack the ability to protect plants at low levels of expression. The aim of this study was to investigate the effects of modest C-terminal diversification on the spectrum of Vip3Ab1 and investigate the utility of Vip3A protein engineering in planta.
The insecticidal spectrum of Vip3Ab1 is active on a wide range of lepidopteran insects including Spodoptera frugiperda but lacks activity on Spodoptera eridania. Here, we generated a novel chimera using the final 177 amino acids from Vip3Ai1 as donor sequence due to its divergence from the Vip3Ab1 and Vip3Aa16 C-terminal regions. We found that changes in the Vip3Ab1 C-terminus expanded the insecticidal spectrum to include potent activity on S. eridania while maintaining activity on Helicoverpa zea, S. frugiperda, and Pseudoplusia includens. Thus, the broadened spectrum of this chimeric protein we call Vip3Ab1-740, demonstrated superior in vitro spectrum relative to the native Vip3Ab1. Further, we generated transgenic Arabidopsis thaliana plants that demonstrate the functional utility of Vip3Ab1-740 to protect plants from S. eridania feeding in planta. Taken together this work provides a foundation for engineering of Vip3A proteins, through C-terminal modification, towards key lepidopteran pests. In this case, a functional gain of insecticidal activity against a major South American soybean pest, S. eridania, is presented.
3. Discussion
Vip3 insecticidal proteins represent a mode of action that is distinct from Bt Cry proteins. Vip3A subfamily members have lethal activity against a broad spectrum of crop damaging lepidopteran pests. Importantly, Vip3A proteins have lethal activity against several
Spodoptera spp. pests, a genus of insects that pose a growing risk to multiple crops including corn and soybean. In this study, we observed differential susceptibility of
S. frugiperda and
S. eridania to Vip3Ab1 as there is a potent lethal activity against
S. frugiperda, while
S. eridania is not affected. There are few published studies comparing Vip3 activity against multiple species of
Spodoptera. In all cases we have identified, Vip3A proteins with lethal activity against one species of
Spodoptera also demonstrate some degree of lethal activity on the second species tested [
10,
11,
12,
13,
14,
15,
16]. Bergamasco et al. provided the only direct comparison of the sensitivity of four different
Spodoptera pests (
S. albula, S. eridania, S. frugiperda, and
S. cosmoides) to Vip3Aa while evaluating the combined effects of Vip3Aa and Cry1Ia [
10]. This group reported that all species tested were sensitive to Vip3Aa and, with the exception of
S. eridania, all insects tested demonstrated enhanced effects with Cry1Ia and Vip3Aa insecticidal proteins. Vip3Ab1 is 84% identical to Vip3Aa1, which has a lethal activity on
S. eridania. Thus, differential
Spodoptera activity of Vip3Ab1 is unexpected.
Vip3Ab1 and Vip3Aa1 are more than 93% identical over the first 612 amino acids and only 52% identical over the final 177 amino acids. Therefore, we hypothesized that alterations to the C-terminal 177 amino acids of Vip3Ab1 would impact insecticidal spectrum. We previously generated protein chimeras utilizing sequences from Vip3A and Vip3B families and observed redirection of insecticidal activity, but severe protein destabilization [
9]. Others have reported that even single amino acid mutations in the final 100 amino acids of Vip3Af1 could have deleterious impact on protein stability and activity [
17]. Therefore, the goal of this study was to generate a synthetic Vip3A protein with C-terminal diversity without negative impact on protein stability. We utilized the C-terminal 177 amino acids from an entirely inactive Vip3A protein, Vip3Ai1. We selected this donor sequence because Vip3Ai1 is relatively unique and less characterized. This stretch of amino acids is only 55.7% identical to Vip3Ab1 and 56.2% identical to Vip3Aa1. We have termed this engineered protein Vip3Ab1-740. Vip3Ab1-740 gained lethal activity against
S. eridania while maintaining lethal activity against
S. frugiperda,
H. zea, and
P. includens. Fang et al. generated similar size protein chimeras utilizing sequences from Vip3Aa and Vip3Ac [
18]. One chimera Vip3AcAa, which utilized the N-terminus of Vip3Ac and the C-terminal 189 amino acids of Vip3Aa, demonstrated novel growth inhibition against
Ostrinia nubilalis, with potencies against
S. frugiperda,
H. zea, and
Bombyx mori that were similar to Vip3Aa [
18]. In this case, Vip3Ab1-740 gained new activity towards
S. eridania, which is not common to either donor protein.
We investigated the proteolytic processing of Vip3Ab1-740 by SDS-PAGE and observed no obvious impact on the rate of degradation relative to Vip3Ab1. In addition, the N-terminal sequence analysis confirmed that
H. zea and
P. includens midgut enzymes processed the chimeric protein at the anticipated KVKK↓DSSP processing site. Banyuls et al. [
17] reported that changes in the C-terminal region of Vip3Af1 resulted in a shift in the processing to Lys
179, which is 21 amino acids upstream of the native lysine rich cleavage site KVKK
200. This observation was accompanied by decreased activity against
S. frugiperda and
A. segetum. Therefore, unlike Banyuls et al. mutant proteins, the amino acids from Vip3Ai1 do not destabilize the Vip3Ab1-740 protein or cause aberrant processing.
While gut fluid processing of native Vip3Ab1 at the corresponding lysine (Lys
179) has not been observed, the presence of Ala
781 might be expected to affect stability based on other research employing alanine scanning [
17]. In the present study, incorporation of the Vip3Ai1 sequence alters this Ala
781 to His
781 in Vip3Ab1-740. Banyuls et al. [
17] observed decreased stability and insecticidal function of Vip3Af1 when native His
781 (based on Vip3Ai1 numbering) was changed to an alanine. Thus, it is possible that the change of Ala
781 to His
781 is a configuration that promotes stability in Vip3Ab1-740. Therefore, this may be a site for future investigation as additional synthetic Vip3A proteins are designed.
The mechanism by which Vip3Ab1-740 gains
S. eridania activity is not evident. The data presented herein suggests that this chimera produces a gain of function rather than a redirection of activity towards a new spectrum of lepidoptera akin to the Vip3A/Vip3B chimeras described previously [
9]. Supporting this concept, insecticidal activity was maintained against
P. includens, but there was decrease in potency of purified protein, which might suggest differential impact of the midgut environment rather than a shift in receptor recognition. In addition, co-feeding Vip3Ab1-740 in the presence of 1600-fold molar excess of Vip3Ab1 did not attenuate Vip3Ab1-740 activity on
S. eridania, which indicates that Vip3Ab1-740 may have increased target site bioavailability or binds a different receptor in vivo, although the latter seems unlikely. To this point, Vip3Ad, Vip3Ae, and Vip3Af, have been shown to bind the same membrane receptors as Vip3Aa in brush border membrane vesicle binding (BBMV) assays [
19]. Furthermore, BBMV from Vip3Aa resistant insects show no differences in the ability to bind the Vip3Aa protein in vitro [
20]. While the mechanism of resistance is not completely understood, it does emphasize the observation of other groups that, in the case of Vip3A, there are factors beyond membrane binding that contribute to insecticidal specificity [
20,
21,
22]. As the primary aim of these experiments was to investigate the impact and utility of modest C-terminal modification on insecticidal spectrum, other experiments will focus on the mechanism by which C-terminal modification operates.
Lastly, we have demonstrated the functional utility of Vip3Ab1-740 in Arabidopsis. Our in planta data is congruent with in vitro data, which indicated that Vip3Ab1 would not confer plant protection from S. eridania. Importantly, relatively low expression levels of Vip3Ab1-740 were able to completely protect Arabidopsis leaves from feeding by H. zea, S. frugiperda, S. eridania, and P. includens. Thus, the modification of the Vip3Ab1 C-terminus with the Vip3Ai1 donor sequence demonstrates a potentially valuable gain of function that can be translated to S. eridania protection in planta.
5. Materials and Methods
5.1. Gene and Protein Sequences
The sequence for Vip3Ab1 corresponds to GenBank Accession AAR40284.1. DIG740 was identified from strain DBt11861 of our internal strain collection. This sequence was found to be identical to GenBank Accession KC156693.1, which corresponds to Vip3Ai1. All sequences are displayed in
Figure S1.
5.2. Construct Design for Bacterial Expression
To generate a chimeric Vip gene consisting of the first 1851 bp of Vip3Ab1 and the last 540 bp of DIG740, polymerase chain reactions (PCR) were performed to generate the two products, then a second round of PCR was performed to join the two products using overlapping PCR with the forward Vip3Ab1 primer and the reverse DIG740 primer. Primers are described in
Table S1. PCR was performed using the Phire Hot Start II polymerase (Thermo Fisher Scientific, Waltham, MA, USA) in the following reaction: 27 μL H
2O, 10 μL 5X Phire buffer, 1 μL dNTP mix, 5 μL Forward (10 μM), 5 μL Reverse (10 μM), 1 μL Vip3Ab1 (20 ng/ μL) and 1 μL Phire polymerase. Cycling was 98 °C/30 s followed by 30 cycles of 98 °C/5 s, 50.8 °C/5 s, 72 °C/2 min followed by a final extension at 72 °C/1 min then hold at 4 °C. For the assembly of the full length chimeric gene the following reaction was used: 26 μL H
2O, 10 μL 5× Phire buffer, 1 μL dNTP mix, 5 μL Vip3Ab1 Forward (10 μM), 5 μL Vip3Ai1 Reverse (10 μM), 1 μL Part A reaction, 1 μL Part B reaction and 1 μL Phire polymerase. Cycling was as above except using 2.5 min extension time. The 2397 bp product was gel purified and ligated into pCR-BluntII-TOPO (Thermo Fisher Scientific) and sequenced. A clone having the correct sequence was digested with BamHI and the fragment was gel purified. The fragment was ligated into pET24(+) (MilliporeSigma, Burlington, MA, USA) which was linearized with BamHI and rSAP treated using NEB T4 DNA ligase. Minipreps were performed and a clone having the gene in the proper orientation was selected for expression.
5.3. Protein Expression and Purification
Vip3Ab1 and Vip3Ab1-740 were initially expressed in
E. coli BL21 (DE3) cells. Briefly, seed and production cultures were grown in TB media (Fisher BioReagents™ Terrific Broth, Cat#BP9728-2, Thermo Fisher Scientific, Waltham, MA, USA) supplemented with 50 µg/mL of kanamycin (GoldBio, Cat#K-120-100, St. Louis, MO, USA). Production cultures were inoculated with a 1:200 dilution of an overnight seed culture (16–18 h) and incubated at 37 °C, 225 rpm, in a 2.5 cm throw shaker, until mid-log phase (OD
600 0.6–0.9). Protein expression was then induced with the addition of 1 mM IPTG and incubated for 18–20 h at 18 °C, 200 rpm in a 2.5 cm throw shaker. Larger scale (>1 L) of both proteins used recombinant
Pseudomonas fluorescens strains as described previously [
23]. Proteins purified from both systems have been shown to have equivalent potency, and the purification methods were the same. Vip3Ab1 was purified as previously described [
9], and Vip3Ab1-740 was purified in a similar manner. Harvested cells containing Vip3Ab1-740 were sonicated in lysis buffer consisting of 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.0), 1 M NaCl, 10% glycerol and 2 mM EDTA with 50 µL of protease inhibitor cocktail (Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO, USA) per 25 mL buffer. The extract was centrifuged at 20,000×
g for 40 min. The soluble protein in the supernatant was precipitated with 50% ammonium sulfate and centrifuged at 20,000×
g for 20 min. The pellet was resuspended in 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.0) and purified by anion exchange chromatography using a HiTrap™ Q HP 5 mL column with an AKTA Purifier chromatography system (GE Healthcare, Chicago, IL, USA). The column was equilibrated in 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.0), and proteins were eluted with a stepwise gradient to 1 M NaCl. Protein-containing fractions were combined and concentrated using Amicon
® Ultra-15 Centrifugal Filter Devices with a 30 kDa MWCO (MilliporeSigma, Burlington, MA, USA). Proteins were desalted to 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.0) using Zeba
® Spin Desalting Columns, 7 MWCO (Thermo Fisher Scientific) or by dialysis in 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.0) using Slide-A-Lyzer
® Dialysis Cassettes, 20,000 MWCO (Thermo Fisher Scientific). Total protein concentrations were measured with the NanoDrop 2000C Spectrophotometer (Thermo Fisher Scientific), using the A280 method. Vip3Ai1 was expressed in
P. fluorescens but was not purified due to lack of activity on insect bioassay.
5.4. SDS-PAGE Analysis
SDS-PAGE analysis was performed using NuPAGE® Novex® 4–12% Bis-Tris Protein Gels (Thermo Scientific). Proteins were diluted in a 4X NuPAGE® LDS Sample Buffer (Thermo Fisher Scientific, Waltham, MA, USA) containing 100 mM tris 2-carboxyethyl phosphine (TCEP) reductant prior to loading onto the gel. Ten µL of Novex® Sharp Pre-stained Protein Standard (Thermo Fisher Scientific) was loaded onto one lane of each gel. Gels were run according to the manufacturer’s recommendations using a NuPAGE® MES SDS Running Buffer (Thermo Fisher Scientific) and stained with SimplyBlue™ SafeStain (Thermo Fisher Scientific), then destained in water and imaged on a flatbed scanner.
5.5. Lepidopteran Midgut Fluid Protein Digestion and N-Terminal Sequencing
Midgut fluids were prepared from
H. zea and
P. includens larvae and normalized by total proteolytic activity using a BODIPY-casein degradation assay as previously described [
9]. Prepared midgut fluids were aliquoted and stored at approximately −80 °C. Proteins were added to reactions at 150 µg/mL final concentration. All digestions were performed at both pH 8.0 and pH 10.0. Control reactions were prepared containing no insect gut fluid. Reactions were incubated with shaking at 30 °C for various time intervals, and the protease inhibitor cocktail (Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO, USA) was added to terminate the reactions prior to the SDS-PAGE analysis. For N-terminal sequencing, protein products were resolved by SDS-PAGE and transferred to a PVDF membrane using an iBlot
®2 Transfer Stack, PVDF, mini with an iBlot
®2 Gel Transfer Device (Thermo Fisher Scientific, Waltham, MA, USA), following the manufacturer’s recommended protocol. The PVDF membrane was stained with Coomassie Brilliant Blue R250 Staining Solution (Bio-Rad Laboratories, Hercules, CA, USA) and destained with 45% methanol, 10% acetic acid. The membrane was rinsed with water and allowed to air dry. The target bands were excised and analyzed by Edman degradation using a Shimadzu PPSQ-33A protein sequencer (Shimadzu, Kyoto, Japan). The data was analyzed with the Shimadzu data analysis software.
5.6. Insect Diet Overlay Bioassays
Bioassays were conducted in 128-well bioassay trays (C-D International, Pitman, NJ). A 40 µL aliquot of protein sample was delivered onto the surface of multispecies lepidopteran diet (Southland Products, Lake Village, AR, USA) in each well. For co-feeding experiments, Vip3Ab1-740 was diluted directly in Vip3Ab1 protein stocks, which were maintained at a concentration of 1 mg/mL. The final ratios of Vip3Ab1-740 and Vip3Ab1 are shown below. The treated trays were air dried, and one individual
Helicoverpa zea,
Spodoptera frugiperda, Spodoptera eridania, or
Pseudoplusia includens larva (24 to 48 h after eclosion) was deposited on the treated diet surface. The infested wells were then sealed with adhesive sheets of clear plastic vented to allow gas exchange (C-D International). Bioassay trays were held under controlled environmental conditions (28 °C, 40% relative humidity, 16:8 h light/dark) for five days. The total number of insects exposed to each protein sample, the number of dead insects and the number of surviving insects were recorded in all insect bioassays. All bioassay results contained less than 15% average mortality. Larvae that had not developed beyond the first instar and did not respond to mechanical stimulation were considered moribund insects and were included in the percent practical mortality computation. Bioassays were conducted under randomized complete block design and replicated at least twice, with 16 larvae per replicate. A co-dosing bioassay was performed with serial dilutions of Vip3Ab1-740 in Vip3Ab1 at a starting concentration of 1 mg/mL, and final protein concentrations are displayed in
Table 2. All statistical analyses were conducted using the JMP software version 12.2 (SAS Institute, Cary, NC, USA). Probit analyses of the pooled mortality and moribund data were used to estimate the 50% lethal concentration (LC50). Binomial distribution analysis was used to generate 95% confidence intervals for comparison of Vip3Ab1 protein co-feeding effects.
5.7. Plant Expression Constructs
The plant-optimized Vip3Ab1 and Vip3Ab1-740 genes were cloned into Agrobacterium transformation vectors essentially as previously described [
24]. DNA sequences for plant-expressed Vip3Ab1-740 can be found in
Figure S3.
5.8. Generation of Transgenic Arabidopsis Plants
Arabidopsis ecotype Columbia was used for transformation. Standard Arabidopsis transformation procedure was used to produce transgenic seed by inflorescence dip method [
25]. The T1 seeds were sown on selection trays (10.5”x21”x1”, T.O. Plastics Inc., Clearwater, MN, USA). For this 400 mg of cold stratified seeds (0.1% agar + 385 mg/L Liberty for 48 h before sowing) were distributed on selection trays using a modified air driven spray apparatus to distribute 10 mL of seed suspension per selection tray. Trays were covered with humidity domes, marked with seed identifier, and placed in a Conviron with an individual watering tray under each flat. The humidifying dome was removed approximately five days post-sowing. The first watering of selection trays was done using sub-irrigation with Hoagland’s fertilizer at approximately 10–14 days post sowing. Vip3Ab1 transgenic controls were generated in a similar manner utilizing herbicide spray selection. Third generation homozygous plants were identified by molecular analysis and maintained as controls.
To achieve a stringent herbicide selection, in addition to stratification with the herbicide, plants are sprayed with a 60 mg/L of gluphosinate (Liberty 280) seven and nine days post-sowing. Resistant to gluphosinate T1 plants were transplanted from selection trays into 2-inch pots and allowed to grow for 7–10 days before sampling for molecular analysis. Based on results of the molecular analysis a subset of plants with single transgene copy were retained for expression analyses, insect bioassay and seed production.
5.9. Molecular Analysis of Transgenic Arabidopsis Plants
For qPCR, approximately 0.5 square centimeter of the Arabidopsis leaf was pinched off each plant and collected in a 96-well DNA extraction plate (#19560, Qiagen, Hilden, Germany). Three hundred uL of extraction buffer was added to each well and tissue was disrupted by bead beating. After tissue maceration, DNA was isolated using a modified protocol for the BioSprint 96 DNA Plant Kit™ (#941558, Qiagen). Detection of the transgene copy number was conducted by quantitative real time PCR (qPCR) using the LightCycler
®480II instrument (Roche Applied Science, Penzberg, Germany) with hydrolysis probe assays. qPCR reactions were set for each sample (
Table S2). The reaction combined internal reference gene TAFII (HEX) and the selectable marker gene DSM2 (FAM) assays with the TAFII probe used to control for qPCR efficiency. The qPCR reaction mix was as follows: Ten µL of 1× LightCycler
®480 Probes Master mix (Roche Applied Science, #04707494001) and containing 0.4 µM of each primer and 0.2 µM of each probe. The crossing-point (Cp) scores and the Relative Quant module of the Roche LightCycler
®480II Software were used to perform the analyses of real time qPCR data. The PCR cycle was 95 °C to 10 min for initial template denaturation, followed by 40 cycles of 95 °C—1 min, 60 °C—40 s, and 72 °C—1 s. Reactions were finished by cooling down to 40 °C for 1 s. The copy number was estimated using the target (DSM2) to reference (TAFII) ratio. Sequence information for primer sequences and probes is shown in
Table S2. Events identified as single copy for the selectable marker DSM2 were retained for the protein detection and insect bioassay.
5.10. Protein Analysis of Transgenic Arabidopsis Leaf Tissues
Single copy events were analyzed for protein accumulation by a quantitative Western blot. Leaf samples (two disks totaling 0.565 cm2) were extracted by adding two 4.5 mm steel beads (Daisy Outdoor Products, Rogers, AR, USA) and 150 µL of extraction buffer (PBS + 10 µL/mL protease inhibitor cocktail; Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO, USA) to each tube. The samples were ground for 3 min in a KLECO bead mill (Garcia Machine, Visalia, CA, USA), then 150 µL of the SDS buffer (PBS + 2% SDS; Thermo Fisher Scientific, Waltham, MA, USA) was added to each tube and the samples were rocked at room temperature for 10 min. After rocking, the samples were centrifuged at 3000× g for 5 min. The resulting supernatant leaf extracts were then mixed with an appropriate amount of sample buffer (NuPage LDS 4X Sample buffer with 40 mM dithiothreitol; Thermo Fisher Scientific). Serial dilutions of a purified protein positive control (Vip3Ab1-740) were prepared in a sample buffer as above to a concentration range of (8–0.06 ng/µL). Samples were resolved on NuPAGE® Novex® 4–12% Bis-Tris Protein Gels (Thermo Fisher Scientific) with a MOPS running buffer (Thermo Fisher Scientific).
Gels were transferred to nitrocellulose membranes. Post transfer, the membranes were blocked for 1 h at room temperature in a blocking buffer (1% DIFCO milk in PBST; Becton Dickinson, Franklin Lakes, NJ, USA) followed by incubation with primary antibody (monoclonal anti-Vip3Ab1) at a concentration of 1.0 µg/mL in a blocking buffer overnight at 4 °C. Membranes were then washed and incubated for 1 h at room temperature in a detection antibody (Goat anti-mouse Cy3; GE Healthcare LifeSciences, Marlborough, MA, USA) diluted 1:3000 in PBST. After incubation, the membranes were washed extensively with PBST followed by rinsing three more times with PBS. The membranes were kept in the dark until analyzed on the Typhoon Imager (GE Healthcare LifeSciences). The blots were scanned for fluorescence at 350–400 PMT with an excitation wavelength of 532 nm and an emission filter setting of 580 nm BP30. The images were then processed using the ImageQuant TL software (GE Healthcare LifeSciences).
5.11. Arabidopsis Feeding Bioassay
Five healthy, single-copy events from each construct were selected for bioassay. Protein expression results were not available before the bioassay plant selection. Four wild type events were chosen as bioassay negative controls. Four plants expressing Vip3Ab1 were selected as positive bioassay controls. The plants were bioassayed at four weeks old with
H. zea, corn earworm (CEW);
P. includens, soybean looper (SBL);
S. frugiperda, fall armyworm (FAW); and
S. eridania, southern armyworm (SAW) larvae. A standard paper hole punch, 6 mm diameter producing a disk of 28.3 mm
2 was used to make five leaf discs per plant. These punches were placed on top of 2% water agar in a 96-well plate, one leaf punch per test well. For each test, wild type plant leaf tissues were sampled first to prevent cross contamination of Bt toxins on the leaf edges, followed by the transformed plants. The leaf punch was cleaned thoroughly with ethanol between plants. Once all leaf punches had been sampled,
H. zea and
S. frugiperda experiment plates were egg seeded with black head stage eggs, with about 3-5 eggs in each well. The
P. includens and
S. eridania plates were infested with neonate larvae, one larva per well. The infested 96-well plates were sealed with a lid and were placed in a transparent box. The bioassay plates were incubated at 28 °C (16:8 h light:dark, 40% RH) for four days prior to scoring the percent leaf damage. The leaf damage scoring scale is reported in
Table 3.