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Conditionally essential: A testis-enriched heat shock protein from fall armyworm safeguards fertility and survival under heat stress.

Zhao Y, Wang P, Xie R, Cao Y, Chen X

Climate Adaptation

Fall armyworm already chews through corn, sorghum, and vegetable gardens on every inhabited continent, and hotter summers are helping it spread further — knowing exactly what keeps it reproducing under heat gives researchers a precise target to shut that down.

Fall armyworm is a caterpillar pest that devastates crops worldwide. Researchers discovered a special protein, found mainly in the insect's reproductive organs, that only becomes critical when temperatures spike — without it, males lose fertility and die in the heat. Under normal conditions the protein is barely needed, which makes it an unusually precise target: interfering with it could cripple armyworm populations specifically during the hot spells that climate change is making more frequent.

Key Findings

1

SfHSP19.8 is expressed almost exclusively in fall armyworm testes during larval and pupal development, making it one of the most tissue-specific heat shock proteins identified in this pest

2

The protein is dispensable for male reproduction under optimal temperatures but becomes essential for fertility under heat stress, demonstrating a conditionally essential function

3

Knockdown of SfHSP19.8 reduced thermotolerance across all life stages, not just in reproductive tissue, indicating a systemic protective role beyond the testes

chevron_right Technical Summary

Scientists found a protein in fall armyworm — one of the world's most destructive crop pests — that switches on during heat waves to keep males fertile and alive. Disrupting this protein could be a new way to suppress armyworm populations as global temperatures rise.

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Abstract Preview

Extreme high temperatures significantly threaten insect development and reproduction. Small heat shock proteins (sHSPs) are crucial for thermal adaptation, but their specific roles in reproduction ...

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Abstract copyright held by the original publisher.

hub This connects to 10 other discoveries — climate-adaptation, pest-management, heat-stress +2 more 5 related articles

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