Article
Interactions of Elevated CO2 and Nitrogen Fertilization: Effects on Production of Bacillus thuringiensis Toxins in Transgenic Plants
Autor
Coviella, Carlos E.
Morgan, David J. W.
Trumble, John T.
Institución
Resumen
Elevated atmospheric CO2 concentrations will cause plants to grow faster, lower
nitrogen content per unit of plant tissue, and generate higher carbon to nitrogen (C/N) ratios. We
hypothesize that production of transgenic proteins will be reduced, thus reducing the efÞciency of
Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) transgenes against insect populations. Commercially available transgenic
cotton plants expressing the Cry 1Ac gene from Bt were compared with a near isogenic non-Bt cotton
line in a split-plot design with two levels of atmospheric CO2 (ambient, 370 ppm and elevated, 900
ppm) incorporating a 232 factorial design with two nitrogen (N) fertilization regimes (low, 30 mg
N/kg soil/wk and high, 130 mg N/kg soil/wk), and two levels of Bt (presence or absence). Bioassays
using Spodoptera exigua (Hu¨ bner) and quantitative enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays for toxin
content indicated reduced Bt protein production in elevated CO2. The tendency for test insects to
consume more foliage from plants with lower N, caused by the elevated CO2, did not compensate
for the reduction in toxin production. N fertilization regime interacted with CO2 concentration,
showing that plants growing in N limited systems would produce substantially less toxin. The use of
transgenic plants is becoming increasingly important and will continue to be so in the next decades.
At the same time, atmospheric CO2 increase will affect the effectiveness of this strategy. These
observations have implications not only for agricultural use of transgenic plants, but also for the
ecological consequences of transfer of Bt toxins to closely related wild plant genotypes.