A novel formulation technology for baculoviruses protects biopesticide from degradation by ultraviolet radiation

Abstract Biopesticides are biological pest control agents that are viewed as safer alternatives to the synthetic chemicals that dominate the global insecticide market. A major constraint on the wider adoption of biopesticides is their susceptibility to the ultraviolet (UV: 290–400 nm) radiation in s...

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Main Authors: Kenneth Wilson, David Grzywacz, Igor Curcic, Freya Scoates, Karen Harper, Annabel Rice, Nigel Paul, Aoife Dillon
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Publishing Group 2020-08-01
Series:Scientific Reports
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-70293-7
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spelling doaj-f8fc5d6b92384195907d2bc68f7ac2fd2021-08-08T11:20:01ZengNature Publishing GroupScientific Reports2045-23222020-08-0110111010.1038/s41598-020-70293-7A novel formulation technology for baculoviruses protects biopesticide from degradation by ultraviolet radiationKenneth Wilson0David Grzywacz1Igor Curcic2Freya Scoates3Karen Harper4Annabel Rice5Nigel Paul6Aoife Dillon7Lancaster Environment Centre, Lancaster UniversityDepartment of Agriculture Health and Environment, Natural Resources Institute, University of GreenwichExosect LimitedExosect LimitedLancaster Environment Centre, Lancaster UniversityLancaster Environment Centre, Lancaster UniversityLancaster Environment Centre, Lancaster UniversityExosect LimitedAbstract Biopesticides are biological pest control agents that are viewed as safer alternatives to the synthetic chemicals that dominate the global insecticide market. A major constraint on the wider adoption of biopesticides is their susceptibility to the ultraviolet (UV: 290–400 nm) radiation in sunlight, which limits their persistence and efficacy. Here, we describe a novel formulation technology for biopesticides in which the active ingredient (baculovirus) is micro-encapsulated in an ENTOSTAT wax combined with a UV absorbant (titanium dioxide, TiO2). Importantly, this capsule protects the sensitive viral DNA from degrading in sunlight, but dissolves in the alkaline insect gut to release the virus, which then infects and kills the pest. We show, using simulated sunlight, in both laboratory bioassays and trials on cabbage and tomato plants, that this can extend the efficacy of the biopesticide well beyond the few hours of existing virus formulations, potentially increasing the spray interval and/or reducing the need for high application rates. The new formulation has a shelf-life at 30 °C of at least 6 months, which is comparable to standard commercial biopesticides and has no phytotoxic effect on the host plants. Taken together, these findings suggest that the new formulation technology could reduce the costs and increase the efficacy of baculovirus biopesticides, with the potential to make them commercially competitive alternatives to synthetic chemicals.https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-70293-7
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kenneth Wilson
David Grzywacz
Igor Curcic
Freya Scoates
Karen Harper
Annabel Rice
Nigel Paul
Aoife Dillon
spellingShingle Kenneth Wilson
David Grzywacz
Igor Curcic
Freya Scoates
Karen Harper
Annabel Rice
Nigel Paul
Aoife Dillon
A novel formulation technology for baculoviruses protects biopesticide from degradation by ultraviolet radiation
Scientific Reports
author_facet Kenneth Wilson
David Grzywacz
Igor Curcic
Freya Scoates
Karen Harper
Annabel Rice
Nigel Paul
Aoife Dillon
author_sort Kenneth Wilson
title A novel formulation technology for baculoviruses protects biopesticide from degradation by ultraviolet radiation
title_short A novel formulation technology for baculoviruses protects biopesticide from degradation by ultraviolet radiation
title_full A novel formulation technology for baculoviruses protects biopesticide from degradation by ultraviolet radiation
title_fullStr A novel formulation technology for baculoviruses protects biopesticide from degradation by ultraviolet radiation
title_full_unstemmed A novel formulation technology for baculoviruses protects biopesticide from degradation by ultraviolet radiation
title_sort novel formulation technology for baculoviruses protects biopesticide from degradation by ultraviolet radiation
publisher Nature Publishing Group
series Scientific Reports
issn 2045-2322
publishDate 2020-08-01
description Abstract Biopesticides are biological pest control agents that are viewed as safer alternatives to the synthetic chemicals that dominate the global insecticide market. A major constraint on the wider adoption of biopesticides is their susceptibility to the ultraviolet (UV: 290–400 nm) radiation in sunlight, which limits their persistence and efficacy. Here, we describe a novel formulation technology for biopesticides in which the active ingredient (baculovirus) is micro-encapsulated in an ENTOSTAT wax combined with a UV absorbant (titanium dioxide, TiO2). Importantly, this capsule protects the sensitive viral DNA from degrading in sunlight, but dissolves in the alkaline insect gut to release the virus, which then infects and kills the pest. We show, using simulated sunlight, in both laboratory bioassays and trials on cabbage and tomato plants, that this can extend the efficacy of the biopesticide well beyond the few hours of existing virus formulations, potentially increasing the spray interval and/or reducing the need for high application rates. The new formulation has a shelf-life at 30 °C of at least 6 months, which is comparable to standard commercial biopesticides and has no phytotoxic effect on the host plants. Taken together, these findings suggest that the new formulation technology could reduce the costs and increase the efficacy of baculovirus biopesticides, with the potential to make them commercially competitive alternatives to synthetic chemicals.
url https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-70293-7
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