Two-dimensional gel electrophoresis of pea root and root hair proteins revealed the existence of at least 10 proteins present at elevated levels in root hairs. One of these, named RH2, was isolated and a partial amino acid sequence was determined from two tryptic peptides. Using this sequence information oligonucleotides were designed to isolate by PCR an RH2 cDNA clone. In situ hybridization studies with this cDNA clone showed that rh2 is not only expressed in root hairs, but also in root epidermal cells lacking these tubular outgrowths. During post-embryonic development the gene is switched on after the transition of protoderm into epidermis and since rh2 is already expressed in a globular pea embryo in the protoderm at the side attached to the suspensor, we conclude that the expression of rh2 is developmentally regulated. At the amino acid level RH2 is 95% homologous to the pea PR protein I49a. These gene encoding I49a is induced in pea pods upon inoculation with the pathogen Fusarium solani [12]. We postulate that rh2 contributes to a constitutive defence barrier in the root epidermis. A similar role has been proposed for chalcone synthase (CHS) and chitinase, pathogenesis-related protein that are also constitutively present in certain epidermal tissues.
The effects of five diets (larvae of Galleria mellonella L., larvae of Spodoptera littoralis (Boisduval), eggs of Ephestia kuehniella Zeller, cysts of Artemia franciscana Kellogg and an artificial diet based on bovine meat) on development, survival and reproduction of two predatory stinkbugs, Picromerus bidens L. and Podisus maculiventris (Say), were studied in the laboratory. Both species successfully completed immature development on the foods offered, except for P. bidens on cysts of A. franciscana. Significant effects of diet on developmental duration were found in both species. Total developmental time from second instar to adult ranged from 25.0 to 41.5 days and from 18.7 to 46.0 days in P. bidens and P. maculiventris, respectively. Nymphal survival of P. maculiventris was superior to that of P. bidens on all diets tested. Nymphal survival of P. maculiventris was greater than 92% on all diets except on A. franciscana cysts, yielding only 50% survival to adulthood. Survival of P. bidens fed on eggs of E. kuehniella was higher than that of conspecifics fed on caterpillar prey or artificial diet (89% on flour moth eggs vs. 68 and 80% on G. mellonella and S. littoralis and only 50% on meat diet). Fresh weight of newly emerged females of both pentatomids was affected by the diet offered to the predators during their nymphal stage. Females of P. maculiventris produced viable eggs on all diets except on cysts of A. franciscana and had mean fecundities of 691, 436, 608 and 344 eggs per female on S. littoralis, G. mellonella, E. kuehniella eggs and the meat diet, respectively. Females of P. bidens laid eggs only on live prey with mean fecundities of 94 and 38 eggs per female on S. littoralis and G. mellonella, respectively. The results indicate a lower nutritional plasticity of P. bidens as compared with P. maculiventris.
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