Plant Biotechnology
EJB Electronic Journal of Biotechnology ISSN: 0717-3458 Vol. 5 No. 1, Issue of April 15, 2002.
© 2002 by Universidad Católica de Valparaíso -- Chile Received August 20, 2001 / Accepted April 1, 2002
REVIEW ARTICLE

Plant protease inhibitors in control of phytophagous insects

Paulraj K. Lawrence*
Department of Biological Sciences
Texas Tech University
Box No 43131
Lubbock, TX 79409-3131, USA
Tel: 806 742 2740
Fax: 806 742 2963
E-mail: p.k.lawrence@ttu.edu

Kripa Ram Koundal
National Research Center on Plant Biotechnology
Indian Agricultural Research Institute
PUSA, New Delhi, India-110012, India
Tel: 91 011 5711554
Fax: 91 011 5766420
E-mail: krk_pbio@iari.ernet.in

* Corresponding author

Keywords: crop pests, protease inhibitors, transgenic plants.

Abstract Full Text

Plant proteinase inhibitors (PIs) have been well established to play a potent defensive role against predators and pathogens. Although diverse endogenous functions for these proteins has been proposed, ranging from regulators of endogenous proteinases to act as storage proteins, evidence for many of these roles is partial, or confined to isolated examples. On the other hand, many PIs have been shown to act as defensive compounds against pests by direct assay or by expression in transgenic crop plants, and a body of evidence for their role in plant defense has been accumulated consistently. The role and mechanism of action for most of these inhibitors are being studied in detail and their respective genes isolated. These genes have been used for the construction of transgenic crop plants to be incorporated in integrated pest management programmes. This article describes the classes of protease inhibitors, their regulation and genes used to construct transgenic plants against phytophagous insects.

Supported by UNESCO / MIRCEN network
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