Natural Coinfection between Novel Species of Baculoviruses in <i>Spodoptera ornithogalli</i> Larvae
Gloria Patricia Barrera,
Laura Fernanda Villamizar,
Gustavo Adolfo Araque,
Juliana Andrea Gómez,
Elsa Judith Guevara,
Carolina Susana Cerrudo,
Mariano Nicolás Belaich
Affiliations
Gloria Patricia Barrera
Corporación Colombiana de Investigación Agropecuaria-Agrosavia, Centro de Investigación Tibaitatá, Kilómetro 14 vía Mosquera, Bogotá 250047, Cundinamarca, Colombia
Laura Fernanda Villamizar
Microbial Solutions, AgResearch Ltd., Lincoln Research Centre, Private Bag 4749, Christchurch 8140, New Zealand
Gustavo Adolfo Araque
Corporación Colombiana de Investigación Agropecuaria-Agrosavia, Centro de Investigación Tibaitatá, Kilómetro 14 vía Mosquera, Bogotá 250047, Cundinamarca, Colombia
Juliana Andrea Gómez
Corporación Colombiana de Investigación Agropecuaria-Agrosavia, Centro de Investigación Tibaitatá, Kilómetro 14 vía Mosquera, Bogotá 250047, Cundinamarca, Colombia
Elsa Judith Guevara
Corporación Colombiana de Investigación Agropecuaria-Agrosavia, Centro de Investigación Tibaitatá, Kilómetro 14 vía Mosquera, Bogotá 250047, Cundinamarca, Colombia
Carolina Susana Cerrudo
Laboratorio de Ingeniería Genética y Biología Celular y Molecular—Área Virosis de Insectos (LIGBCM—AVI), Dto. de Ciencia y Tecnología, Universidad Nacional de Quilmes, Roque Saenz Peña 352, Bernal 1876, Provincia de Buenos Aires, Argentina
Mariano Nicolás Belaich
Laboratorio de Ingeniería Genética y Biología Celular y Molecular—Área Virosis de Insectos (LIGBCM—AVI), Dto. de Ciencia y Tecnología, Universidad Nacional de Quilmes, Roque Saenz Peña 352, Bernal 1876, Provincia de Buenos Aires, Argentina
Spodoptera ornithogalli (Guenée) (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae) is an important pest in different crops of economic relevance in America. For its control, strategies that include chemicals are usually used; so, the description of entomopathogens would be very useful for the formulation of biopesticides. In this regard, two different baculoviruses affecting S. ornithogalli were isolated in Colombia, with one of them being an NPV and the other a GV. Ultrastructural, molecular, and biological characterization showed that both isolates possess the 38 core genes and are novel species in Baculoviridae, named as Spodoptera ornithogalli nucleopolyhedrovirus (SporNPV) and Spodoptera ornithogalli granulovirus (SporGV). The bioassays carried out in larvae of S. ornithogalli and S. frugiperda showed infectivity in both hosts but being higher in the first. In addition, it was observed that SporGV potentiates the insecticidal action of SporNPV (maximum value in ratio 2.5:97.5). Both viruses are individually infective but coexist in nature, producing mixed infections with a synergistic effect that improves the performance of the NPV and enables the transmission of the GV, which presents a slowly killing phenotype.