Temporal Variation in Target Site Mutations Is Associated with Diamide Cross-Resistance in Diamondback Moth Populations (Lepidoptera: Plutellidae) from Florida and Georgia, USA

 Collection sites, dates, and coordinates for all diamondback moth populations in this study.
Collection sites, dates, and coordinates for all diamondback moth populations in this study.

The Diamondback moth (DBM), Plutella xylostella (L.), the most significant worldwide pest of Brassica crops, is notorious for resistance to a diverse number of insecticides. Field populations bioassayed in Georgia and Florida, USA, in 2018 were resistant to chlorantraniliprole but susceptible to cyantraniliprole. Subsequently, populations assayed in 2021, 2022, and 2023 were cross-resistant to both diamides. We used NextSeq analysis of the ryanodine receptor PxRyR, the target of diamides, to quantify target site mutations associated with resistance. Three populations sampled in 2018 had a high prevalence (75.0-98.3% of total reads) of the G4946E mutation, associated with resistance to chlorantraniliprole, and additionally, in one population, a very low (2.7%) prevalence of another mutation, I4790K, was associated with diamide cross-resistance. Populations sampled in 2021 had a decreased prevalence of G4946E (0.7 and 8.4%) and increased prevalence of I4790K (9.3 and 18.0%). The G4946E allele was almost absent (0.2% to 3.9%) in populations sampled in 2022 and 2023, while I4790K was present at frequencies from 34.1% to 84.0%. These data suggest a remarkable shift in PxRyR target site mutations, replacing G4946E with I4790K, which occurred between 2018 and 2022, and were associated with the recent occurrence of cross-resistance in DBM populations in the Southeastern USA.

Thomas P Dunn, Md Abdullah Al Baki, Paulo S G Cremonez, David G Riley, Alton N Sparks Jr, Hugh Smith, Donald E Champagne. Insects. 2025 Nov 19;16(11):1179. doi: 10.3390/insects16111179.