Scientists may be on the way to genetically modifying plants to naturally protect against pests in new ways. That is good news for people in developing nations and fans of the environment. Older insecticides present environmental and health risks and insects develop resistance to them, complicating pest-control strategies. 

Along with that, millions of deaths result from diseases transmitted by insects each year, not to mention economic losses totaling billions of dollars annually.

Enter "insect-specific growth regulators," which, as their name suggests, are compounds that regulate the growth of insects. They represent attractive pest-control agents because they pose no health risk to humans and are also environmentally safe. One hormone in insects, called juvenile hormone, is a particularly attractive target for insect growth regulators because this hormone exists only in insects.

Juvenile hormone plays key roles in insect development, reproduction and other physiological functions and an international team has investigated in detail how juvenile hormone acts and has devised a method to prevent its working. The researchers, led in the United States by Alexander Raikhel, a distinguished professor of entomology at UC Riverside, discovered potent compounds in plants that counteract the action of juvenile hormone. These compounds, called juvenile hormone antagonists (JHANs), make up plants' innate resistance mechanism against insect herbivores.

In collaboration with Korean scientists, Raikhel's lab screened 1,651 plant species and chose active JHANs from these plants. They then identified five JHANs from two plants that are effective in causing mortality of yellow fever mosquito larvae, specifically by retarding the development of ovaries.

"Our experiments showed that these five JHANs are effective against yellow fever mosquitoes," Raikhel said. "Our Korean collaborators, led by Sang Woon Shin at Seoul National University, are testing the effect of these five molecules on other agricultural pests. These newly discovered natural molecules could lead to the development of a new class of safe and effective pesticides to control mosquitoes and, we expect, other agricultural pests."

Published in PNAS.