4.6 Review

Role of Modified Atmosphere in Pest Control and Mechanism of Its Effect on Insects

Journal

FRONTIERS IN PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 10, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2019.00206

Keywords

modified atmosphere; physiological adaptation; pest control; hypoxia; molecular mechanisms

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31460476]
  2. Regional First-class Discipline Construction of Guizhou Province [[2017] 85]
  3. Discipline and Master's Site Construction Project of Guiyang University by Guiyang City [SH-2019]
  4. Training Project for High-Level Innovative Talents in Guizhou Province [2016 [4020]]
  5. Program for Academician workstation in Guiyang University [20195605]
  6. Special Funding of Guiyang Science and Technology Bureau
  7. Guiyang University [GYU-KYZ(2019)02-06]

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Pests not only attack field crops during the growing season, but also damage grains and other food products stored in granaries. Modified or controlled atmospheres (MAs or CAs) with higher or lower concentrations of atmospheric gases, mainly oxygen (O-2), carbon dioxide (CO2), ozone (O-3), and nitric oxide (NO), provide a cost-effective method to kill target pests and protect stored products. In this review, the most recent discoveries in the field of MAs are discussed, with a focus on pest control as well as current MA technologies. Although MAs have been used for more than 30 years in pest control and play a role in storage pest management, the specific mechanisms by which insects are affected by and adapt to low O-2 (hypoxia) and high carbon CO2 (hypercapnia) are not completely understood. Insect tolerance to hypoxia/anoxia and hypercapnia involves a decrease in aerobic metabolism, including decreased NADPH enzyme activity, and subsequently, decreases in glutathione production and catalase, superoxide dismutase, glutathione-S-transferase, and glutathione peroxidase activities, as well as increases in carboxyl esterase and phosphatase activities. In addition, hypoxia induces energy and nutrient production, and in adapted insects, glycolysis and pyruvate carboxylase fluxes are downregulated, accompanied with O-2 consumption and acetate production. Consequently, genes encoding various signal transduction pathway components, including epidermal growth factor, insulin, Notch, and Toll/Imd signaling, are downregulated. We review the changes in insect energy and nutrient sources, metabolic enzymes, and molecular pathways in response to modified O-2, CO2, NO, and O-3 concentrations, as well as the role of MAs in pest control. This knowledge will be useful for applying MAs in combination with temperature control for pest control in stored food products.

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