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Featured researches published by Hai-Tung Feng.


Journal of Economic Entomology | 2004

Resistance and Synergistic Effects of Insecticides in Bactrocera dorsalis (Diptera: Tephritidae) in Taiwan

Ju-Chun Hsu; Hai-Tung Feng; Wen-Jer Wu

Abstract Oriental fruit flies, Bactrocera dorsalis (Hendel), were treated with 10 insecticides, including six organophosphates (naled, trichlorfon, fenitrothion, fenthion, formothion, and malathion), one carbamate (methomyl), and three pyrethroids (cyfluthrin, cypermethrin, and fenvalerate), by a topical application assay under laboratory conditions. Subparental lines of each generation treated with the same insecticide were selected for 30 generations and were designated as x-r lines (x, insecticide; r, resistant). The parent colony was maintained as the susceptible colony. The line treated with naled exhibited the lowest increase in resistance (4.7-fold), whereas the line treated with formothion exhibited the highest increase in resistance (up to 594-fold) compared with the susceptible colony. Synergism bioassays also were carried out. Based on this, S,S,S-tributyl phosphorotrithioate displayed a synergistic effect for naled, trichlorfon, and malathion resistance, whereas piperonyl butoxide displayed a synergistic effect for pyrethroid resistance. All 10 resistant lines also exhibited some cross-resistance to other insecticides, not only to the same chemical class of insecticides but also to other classes. However, none of the organophosphate-resistant or the methomyl-resistant lines exhibited cross-resistance to two of the pyrethroids (cypermethrin and fenvalerate). Overall, the laboratory resistance and cross-resistance data developed here should provide useful tools and information for designing an insecticide management strategy for controlling this fruit fly in the field.


Journal of Economic Entomology | 2006

Development of Resistance to Spinosad in Oriental Fruit Fly (Diptera: Tephritidae) in Laboratory Selection and Cross-Resistance

Ju-Chun Hsu; Hai-Tung Feng

In this study, we assessed the potential for the development of resistance to the insecticide spinosad in a laboratory colony of the oriental fruit fly, Bactrocera dorsalis (Hendel) (Diptera: Tephritidae). Resistance was selected by using topical applications of spinosad. After eight generations of selection, the LD50 of the selected line was 408 times greater compared with that of the untreated parental colony. This spinosad-resistant line did not exhibit cross-resistance to 10 other insecticides tested, including six organophosphates (naled, trichlorfon, fenitrothion. fenthion, formothion, and malathion) one carbamate (methomyl), and three pyrethroids (cyfluthrin, cypermethrin, and fenvalerate). However, using lines previously selected for resistance to these same insecticides, two of the 10 lines tested (naled- and malathion-resistant) did show some cross-resistance to spinosad. Also, oriental fruit flies from different field collections where naled and malathion have been used for control purposes displayed some resistance to spinosad. In addition, the effects of direct ingestion of spinosad through dietary supplementation also were tested. Overall, the laboratory resistance and cross-resistance data developed in this study provide new information that will be useful for managing the development of resistance when spinosad is used to control B. dorsalis in the field.


Insect Biochemistry and Molecular Biology | 2012

Truncated transcripts of nicotinic acetylcholine subunit gene Bdα6 are associated with spinosad resistance in Bactrocera dorsalis

Ju-Chun Hsu; Hai-Tung Feng; Wen-Jer Wu; Scott M. Geib; Ching-hua Mao; John Vontas

Spinosad-resistance mechanisms of Bactrocera dorsalis, one of the most important agricultural pests worldwide, were investigated. Resistance levels to spinosad in a B. dorsalis strain from Taiwan were more than 2000-fold, but showed no cross resistance to imidacloprid or fipronil. Combined biochemical and synergistic data indicated that target-site insensitivity is the major resistance component. The gene encoding the nAChR subunit alpha 6 (Bdα6), the putative molecular target of spinosad, was isolated using PCR and RACE techniques. The full-length cDNA of Bdα6 from spinosad-susceptible strains had an open reading frame of 1467 bp and codes for a typical nAChR subunit. Two isoforms of exon 3 (3a and 3b) and exon 8 (8a and 8b), and four full-length splicing variants were found in the susceptible strain. All transcripts from the spinosad-resistant strain were truncated and coded for apparently non-functional Bdα6. Genetic linkage analysis further associated spinosad-resistance phenotype with the truncated Bdα6 forms. This finding is consistent with a previous study in Plutella xylostella. Small deletions and insertions and consequent premature stop codons in exon 7 were associated with the truncated transcripts at the cDNA level. Analysis of genomic DNA sequences (intron 2 and exons 3-6) failed to detect exon 5 in resistant flies. In addition, a mutation in Bdα6 intron 2, just before the truncated/mis-splicing region and in same location with a mutation previously reported in the Pxylα6 gene, was identified in the resistant flies. RNA editing was investigated but was not found to be associated with resistance. While the demonstration of truncated transcripts causing resistance was outlined, the mechanism responsible for generating truncated transcripts remains unknown.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Discovery of Genes Related to Insecticide Resistance in Bactrocera dorsalis by Functional Genomic Analysis of a De Novo Assembled Transcriptome

Ju-Chun Hsu; Ting-Ying Chien; Chia-Cheng Hu; Mei-Ju May Chen; Wen-Jer Wu; Hai-Tung Feng; David S. Haymer; Chien-Yu Chen

Insecticide resistance has recently become a critical concern for control of many insect pest species. Genome sequencing and global quantization of gene expression through analysis of the transcriptome can provide useful information relevant to this challenging problem. The oriental fruit fly, Bactrocera dorsalis, is one of the worlds most destructive agricultural pests, and recently it has been used as a target for studies of genetic mechanisms related to insecticide resistance. However, prior to this study, the molecular data available for this species was largely limited to genes identified through homology. To provide a broader pool of gene sequences of potential interest with regard to insecticide resistance, this study uses whole transcriptome analysis developed through de novo assembly of short reads generated by next-generation sequencing (NGS). The transcriptome of B. dorsalis was initially constructed using Illuminas Solexa sequencing technology. Qualified reads were assembled into contigs and potential splicing variants (isotigs). A total of 29,067 isotigs have putative homologues in the non-redundant (nr) protein database from NCBI, and 11,073 of these correspond to distinct D. melanogaster proteins in the RefSeq database. Approximately 5,546 isotigs contain coding sequences that are at least 80% complete and appear to represent B. dorsalis genes. We observed a strong correlation between the completeness of the assembled sequences and the expression intensity of the transcripts. The assembled sequences were also used to identify large numbers of genes potentially belonging to families related to insecticide resistance. A total of 90 P450-, 42 GST-and 37 COE-related genes, representing three major enzyme families involved in insecticide metabolism and resistance, were identified. In addition, 36 isotigs were discovered to contain target site sequences related to four classes of resistance genes. Identified sequence motifs were also analyzed to characterize putative polypeptide translational products and associate them with specific genes and protein functions.


Insect Biochemistry and Molecular Biology | 2008

Alterations of the acetylcholinesterase enzyme in the oriental fruit fly Bactrocera dorsalis are correlated with resistance to the organophosphate insecticide fenitrothion

Ju-Chun Hsu; Wen-Jer Wu; David S. Haymer; Hsiu-Ying Liao; Hai-Tung Feng

Alterations of the structure and activity of the enzyme acetylcholinesterase (AChE) leading to resistance to organophosphate insecticides have been examined in the oriental fruit fly, Bactrocera dorsalis (Hendel), an economic pest of great economic importance in the Asia-Pacific region. We used affinity chromatography to purify AChE isoenzymes from heads of insects from lines showing the phenotypes of resistance and sensitivity to insecticide treatments. The AChE enzyme from a strain selected for resistance to the insecticide fenitrothion shows substantially lower catalytic efficiency for various substrates and 124-, 373- and 5810-fold less sensitivity to inhibition by paraoxon, eserine and fenitroxon, respectively, compared to that of the fenitrothion susceptible line. Using peptide mass fingerprinting, we also show how specific changes in the structure of the AChE enzymes in these lines relate to the resistant and sensitive alleles of the AChE (ace) gene characterized previously in this species (described in Hsu, J.-C., Haymer, D.S., Wu, W.-J., Feng, H.-T., 2006. Mutations in the acetylcholinesterase gene of Bactrocera dorsalis associated with resistance to organophosphorus insecticides. Insect Biochem. Mol. Biol. 36, 396-402). Polyclonal antibodies specific to the purified isoenzymes and real-time PCR were also used to show that both the amount of the isoenzyme present and the expression levels of the ace genes were not significantly different between the R and S lines, indicating that quantitative changes in gene expression were not significantly contributing to the resistance phenotype. Overall, our results support a direct causal relationship between the mutations previously identified in the ace gene of this species and qualitative alterations of the structure and function of the AChE enzyme as the basis for the resistance phenotype. Our results also provide a basis for further comparisons of insecticide resistance phenomena seen in closely related species, such as Bactrocera oleae, as well as in a wide range of more distantly related insect species.


Entomologia Experimentalis Et Applicata | 2010

Potential for insecticide resistance in populations of Bactrocera dorsalis in Hawaii: spinosad susceptibility and molecular characterization of a gene associated with organophosphate resistance

Ming-Yi Chou; David S. Haymer; Hai-Tung Feng; Ronald F. L. Mau; Ju-Chun Hsu

The potential for populations to become resistant to a particular insecticide treatment regimen is a major issue for all insect pest species. In Hawaii, for example, organophosphate (OP)‐based cover sprays have been the chemical treatment most commonly applied against oriental fruit fly, Bactrocera dorsalis (Hendel) (Diptera: Tephritidae), populations since the 1950s. Moreover, bait spray treatments using spinosad were adopted as a major control tactic in the Hawaii area‐wide fruit fly pest management program beginning in the year 2000. To determine the current level of spinosad and OP tolerance of wild B. dorsalis populations, bioassays were conducted on flies collected from a range of geographic localities within the Hawaiian islands. Adult B. dorsalis flies were tested (1) for the level of susceptibility to spinosad using LC50 diagnostic criteria, and (2) for the presence of alleles of the ace gene previously shown to be associated with OP resistance. Regarding spinosad tolerance, only flies from Puna, the one area lacking prior exposure to spinosad, showed any significant difference compared to controls, and here the difference was only in terms of non‐overlap of 95% fiducial limit values. With respect to OP tolerance, specific mutations in the ace gene associated with resistance to these insecticides were found in only two populations, and in both cases, these alleles occurred at relatively low frequencies. These results suggest that at the present time, populations of B. dorsalis in Hawaii show no evidence for having acquired resistance to the insecticides widely used in control programs.


Journal of Economic Entomology | 2011

Fitness Costs of an Insecticide Resistance and Their Population Dynamical Consequences in the Oriental Fruit Fly

Chi-Chun Fang; Toshinori Okuyama; Wen-Jer Wu; Hai-Tung Feng; Ju-Chun Hsu

ABSTRACT Naled is a commonly used insecticide for controlling populations of the oriental fruit fly, Bactrocera dorsalis (Hendel), in Taiwan and other countries. B. dorsalis has developed resistance to the insecticide, and the resistance management is an important issue. Ecological effects (e.g., fitness costs) of the resistance, when fully understood, can be used for the resistance management. This study examined the effects of the insecticide resistance on important life history traits (i.e., survival rates, stage durations, and fecundity) of the oriental fruit fly by comparing the traits of insecticide resistant individuals and susceptible individuals. Population dynamical properties were also examined using a stage-structured matrix model that was parameterized with the empirical data. The results revealed that susceptible individuals had shorter stage durations (e.g., grew faster) and reproduced more than resistant individuals. The average longevity of sexually mature susceptible adults was longer than that of sexually mature resistant adults. The matrix population model predicted that a population of the susceptible individuals would grow faster than a population of the resistant individuals in the absence of the insecticide. The sensitivity analysis of the model suggests that the sexually immature adult stage is a good candidate for controlling B. dorsalis populations.


Pesticide Biochemistry and Physiology | 2014

Amino acid substitutions and intron polymorphism of acetylcholinesterase1 associated with mevinphos resistance in diamondback moth, Plutella xylostella (L.).

Shih-Chia Yeh; Chia-Li Lin; Cheng Chang; Hai-Tung Feng; Shu-Mei Dai

The diamondback moth, Plutella xylostella L., is the most destructive insect pest of Brassica crops in the world. It has developed resistance rapidly to almost every insecticide used for its control. Mevinphos, a fast degrading and slow resistance evocating organophosphorus insecticide, has been recommended for controlling P. xylostella in Taiwan for more than 40years. SHM strain of P. xylostella, with ca. 22-fold resistance to this chemical, has been established from a field SH strain by selecting with mevinphos since 1997. Three mutations, i.e., G892T, G971C, and T1156T/G leading to A298S, G324A, and F386F/V amino acid substitutions in acetylcholinesterase1 (AChE1), were identified in these two strains; along with three haplotype pairs and a polymorphic intron in AChE1 gene (ace1). Two genetically pure lines, i.e., an SHggt wild type with intron AS and an SHMTCN mutant carrying G892T, G971C, T1156T/G mutations and intron AR in ace1, were established by single pair mating and haplotype determination. The F1 of SHMTCN strain had 52-fold resistance to mevinphos in comparison with the F1 of SHggt strain. In addition, AChE1 of this SHMTCN population, which exhibited lower maximum velocity (Vmax) and affinity (Km), was less susceptible to the inhibition of mevinphos, with an I50 32-fold higher than that of the SHggt F1 population. These results imply that amino acid substitutions in AChE1 of SHMTCN strain are associated with mevinphos resistance in this insect pest, and this finding is important for insecticide resistance management of P. xylostella in the field.


The Scientific World Journal | 2012

Monitoring resistance to spinosad in the melon fly (Bactrocera cucurbitae) in Hawaii and Taiwan.

Ju-Chun Hsu; David S. Haymer; Ming-Yi Chou; Hai-Tung Feng; Hsaio-Han Chen; Yu-Bing Huang; Ronald F. L. Mau

Spinosad is a natural insecticide with desirable qualities, and it is widely used as an alternative to organophosphates for control of pests such as the melon fly, Bactrocera cucurbitae (Coquillett). To monitor the potential for development of resistance, information about the current levels of tolerance to spinosad in melon fly populations were established in this study. Spinosad tolerance bioassays were conducted using both topical applications and feeding methods on flies from field populations with extensive exposure to spinosad as well as from collections with little or no prior exposure. Increased levels of resistance were observed in flies from the field populations. Also, higher dosages were generally required to achieve specific levels of mortality using topical applications compared to the feeding method, but these levels were all lower than those used for many organophosphate-based food lures. Our information is important for maintaining effective programs for melon fly management using spinosad.


台灣昆蟲 | 2010

Greenhouse and Field Evaluation of a New Male Annihilation Technique (MAT) Product, SPLAT-MAT Spinosad ME™, for the Control of Oriental Fruit Flies (Diptera: Tephritidae) in Taiwan

Ju-Chun Hsu; Pei-Fang Liu; Mark Hertlein; Ronald F. L. Mau; Hai-Tung Feng

The attraction and toxicity of a novel male annihilation technique (MAT) product, SPLAT-MAT Spinosad ME™ (SPLAT-Spin-ME), to the male of the oriental fruit fly (Bactrocera dorsalis) was evaluated under both greenhouse and field conditions in Taiwan. SPLAT-Spin-ME is a viscous, MAT formulation containing low doses of spinosad (2%) mixed with the powerful male-specific parapheromone attractant methyl eugenol (ME). The proprietary carrier formulation, SPLAT ® , provides a metered release of the toxicant and the attractant into the environment. In greenhouse cage trials the attraction rates of B. dorsalis males for the two MAT treatments (SPLAT-Spin-ME, naled+ME) were equally high at 0, 1, and 2 weeks weathering time-points, and uniformly low for the two bait spray treatments (GF-120 bait spray, malathion protein bait spray). The mortality of B. dorsalis males in greenhouse cage studies for the two MAT treatments was highest with SPLAT-Spin-ME outperforming naled+ME at the 1 and 2 weeks weathering periods both at the 24 h and 48 h grading intervals, with neither bait spray treatments providing a substantial mortality. The results from the field cage studies were the reverse of the results from the greenhouse evaluations. In the field cage studies naled+ME (8 mL) maintained a consistent ca 70-76% attraction rate of up to 7 weeks, whereas SPLAT-Spin-ME (1 g) demonstrated a relatively rapid decline in attraction from an initial 51% to 32% and below starting at week 4. Based on a 48 h grading period, naled+ME generated 92-100% mortality in the field mortality bioassay at all weathering time-points from 0-8 weeks, whereas SPLAT-SpinME provided 88-100% mortality, but only through week 3. The markedly better performance of naled+ME in the field vs. the greenhouse bioassays is

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Ju-Chun Hsu

National Taiwan University

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Wen-Jer Wu

National Taiwan University

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David S. Haymer

University of Hawaii at Manoa

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Chia-Li Lin

National Chung Hsing University

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Chien-Yu Chen

National Taiwan University

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Mei-Ju May Chen

National Taiwan University

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Shih-Chia Yeh

National Chung Hsing University

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Shu-Mei Dai

National Chung Hsing University

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Ting-Ying Chien

National Taiwan University

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