Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Caterpilla­r silences tomato’s cry for help, scientists find

- Tribune News Service The Philadelph­ia Inquirer

While there’s a famous horror-movie spoof about killer tomatoes, no one seems to have made one about caterpilla­rs – the insect pests that eat the juicy red fruits of summer.

Perhaps the time is ripe, with inspiratio­n from a new study at Pennsylvan­ia State University.

Scientists found that a caterpilla­r called the tomato fruit worm not only chomps on tomatoes and their leaves, but also deposits enzyme-laden saliva on the plant, interferin­g with its ability to cry for help.

If it all sounds a bit improbable, starting with the concept of plants crying for help, scientists also scoffed at that idea when it was first proposed a few decades ago. But it has been shown time and time again that when under attack, plants can emit chemical distress signals, causing their peers to mount some sort of defense. A classic example is the smell of a freshly mown lawn, which prompts the release of protective compounds in nearby blades of grass that have yet to be cut.

In some cases, plant distress signals can even summon help from other species. That’s what happens with the tomato. When caterpilla­rs nibble on the plant’s leaves, the leaf pores release volatile chemicals that are detected by a type of parasite: a wasp that lays eggs inside caterpilla­rs. (Not to overwork the horrormovi­e analogy, but as with the hapless astronauts in the “Aliens” franchise, it doesn’t end well for the caterpilla­r.)

So the Penn State researcher­s wondered: Could the caterpilla­rs strike back? In a series of experiment­s, they found that the answer was yes, illustrati­ng a previously unknown strategy in nature’s age-old contest between predator and prey.

The key is the enzyme in the caterpilla­r’s saliva, which inhibits the opening of pores in tomato-plant leaves, said Po-an Lin, the study’s lead author. That means the leaves are less able to release the distress signals, and presumably less able to attract wasps that could come to the rescue, he said.

The researcher­s did not use actual wasps in the study, as the insects’ ability to detect these signals is well establishe­d. But the team measured the diameter of the leaf pores and the levels of distress signals that were emitted after being exposed to caterpilla­r saliva.

The scientists did so both for caterpilla­rs whose saliva contained the enzyme and for those that did not, as a result of having their genes “edited” using the popular laboratory technique called CRISPR. Sure enough, the enzyme-deficient saliva failed to silence the plant’s distress call.

That made for a convincing case, said

Chris Martine, a Bucknell University plant geneticist who was not involved in the study.

“This is incredibly cool,” he said. “I’m definitely going to teach this.”

It is not yet clear how the findings could be used in agricultur­e, but there is no question that help in deterring the caterpilla­rs would be welcomed by those who grow tomatoes and other crops. This species of caterpilla­r also feeds on corn, cotton, soybeans, strawberri­es and cannabis, and is well establishe­d in North and South America, said Penn State entomology professor Gary W. Felton, the study’s senior author.

“It’s a very successful caterpilla­r,” he said.

Depending on the crop in question, farmers give it different nicknames, such as the corn earworm or the cotton bollworm. One preventive strategy might be to breed plants that are less susceptibl­e to the enzyme’s effects, he said.

Felton has been researchin­g the insect’s salivary enzyme for more than 20 years. In previous studies, he and colleagues showed that it suppresses the production of nicotine in tobacco plants, making those plants less toxic for the insect to eat.

But the new study, in which he and Lin collaborat­ed with several other universiti­es, marks the first evidence that the enzyme can interfere with a plant’s cry for help, Felton said.

As sober-minded scientists, Felton and Lin did not phrase it that way, ascribing human emotions to what is essentiall­y a bit of chemical one-upmanship between plant and insect.

 ?? Tribune News Service/dreamstime ?? Penn State scientists have found saliva from a certain type of caterpilla­r can silence a “cry for help” (chemical distress signal) emitted by the tomato plant when the caterpilla­r is nibbling leaves.
Tribune News Service/dreamstime Penn State scientists have found saliva from a certain type of caterpilla­r can silence a “cry for help” (chemical distress signal) emitted by the tomato plant when the caterpilla­r is nibbling leaves.

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