"Bt toxins are great for that because they only kill certain insects and don't harm other living things. These new designer toxins give us another environmentally friendly way to control insects." The Mexico team developed the designer toxins by tweaking the gene that codes for the toxin, a protein. The researchers then teamed up with Tabashnik to test their modified toxins on UA's colony of Bt-resistant pink bollworms, major cotton pests, reports sciencedaily.
Team member Alejandra Bravo, a research scientist at Universidad Nacional Autonóma de México (UNAM) said, "We proposed that changing a small part of the toxin would kill the insect -- and we did it." The team's research article, "Engineering Modified Bt Toxins to Counter

The couple cared for Tabashnik while he recovered. He asked what he could do to repay their kindness, and Soberón suggested collaborating to test their designer toxins on UA's resistant insects. "It was the perfect match," Tabashnik said. "We knew what made our strains resistant, and they hypothesized that their designer toxins could overcome the resistance." The discovery is based on understanding a receptor molecule called cadherin on the insects' gut membranes. Normal cadherin binds with the Bt toxin in a lock-and-key fashion. After the toxin binds, an enzyme hacks a bit off each toxin molecule. The trimmed toxin molecules clump and form pores in the gut membrane cells. The pores let materials flow chaotically in and out of the cells. As a result cells and ultimately the insect die. Tabashnik and his UA colleagues Tim Dennehy and Yves Carrière knew the Bt-resistant pink bollworms in their colony had a mutant version of cadherin.
Tabashnik said, "These resistant insects have genetic changes, mutations, that change the lock. Their cadherin no longer takes the key." The UNAM team did an end-run around the resistant insects' strategy. The modified, or designer, toxins have that crucial bit already gone, so they clump and form the death-dealing pores. No cadherin needed. Bravo said, "When Bruce told us it killed the insects, we were very happy. We know if it kills resistant insects, it will be very important."The researchers have applied for a multinational patent for the designer toxins. UNAM is the lead organization in the patent. Combating Bt-resistant pests without using broad-spectrum insecticides can make agriculture safer for farm workers, better for the environment and more profitable for growers, Tabashnik said. He said, "The university research that helped produce this new invention is an investment that can bring returns to the state of Arizona."
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