Functional redundancy of two ABC transporter proteins in mediating toxicity of Bacillus thuringiensis to cotton bollworm

Evolution of pest resistance reduces the efficacy of insecticidal proteins from the gram-positive bacterium Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) used widely in sprays and transgenic crops. Better understanding of the genetic basis of resistance is needed to more effectively monitor, manage, and counter pest resistance to Bt toxins. Here we used CRISPR/Cas9 gene editing to clarify the genetics of Bt resistance and the associated effects on susceptibility to other microbial insecticides in one of the world’s most damaging pests, the cotton bollworm (Helicoverpa armigera). We discovered that CRISPR-mediated knockouts of ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporter genes HaABCC2 and HaABCC3 together caused >15,000-fold resistance to Bt toxin Cry1Ac, whereas knocking out either HaABCC2 or HaABCC3 alone had little or no effect. Inheritance of resistance was autosomal and recessive. Bioassays of progeny from interstrain crosses revealed that one wild type allele of either HaABCC2 or HaABCC3 is sufficient to sustain substantial susceptibility to Cry1Ac. In contrast with previous results, susceptibility to two insecticides derived from bacteria other than Bt (abamectin and spinetoram), was not affected by knocking out HaABCC2, HaABCC3, or both. The results here provide the first evidence that either HaABCC2 or HaABCC3 protein is sufficient to confer substantial susceptibility to Cry1Ac. The functional redundancy of these two proteins in toxicity of Cry1Ac to H. armigera is expected to reduce the likelihood of field-evolved resistance relative to disruption of a toxic process where mutations affecting a single protein can confer resistance.


Introduction
Insecticidal proteins from the gram-positive soil bacterium Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) are used extensively in sprays and transgenic plants to control insects that devour crops and vector diseases [1,2]. These Bt proteins are especially valuable because they kill some devastating pests, but are not toxic to humans and most other non-target organisms [1,3,4]. Worldwide planting of transgenic crops that produce Bt proteins increased from 1.1 million hectares in 1996 to 104 million hectares in 2018 [5]. Benefits of Bt crops include pest suppression and reduced use of conventional insecticides [6][7][8][9][10][11]. However, rapid evolution of resistance to Bt toxins by pests has diminished these benefits [12,13]. Practical resistance, which is field-evolved resistance that has practical consequences for pest control, is documented for Bt sprays in some populations of two major pests [14,15]. Practical resistance to Bt crops has increased from three cases in 2005 to at least 22 cases affecting nine major pest species [12,13,16]. Better understanding of the genetic basis of resistance is urgently needed to more effectively monitor, manage, and counter pest resistance to Bt toxins.
The most common and most potent mechanism of insect resistance to Bt toxins is disruption of toxin binding to larval midgut receptors, particularly cadherins and ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporter proteins [17][18][19]. Resistance to crystalline (Cry) toxins of Bt in the Cry1, Cry2 or Cry3 families is associated with ABC transporter proteins in some lab-selected strains and field-selected populations of at least nine insect species [19][20][21][22][23][24][25][26][27]. In addition to studies implicating several ABC transporter proteins in resistance to Cry toxins, extensive evidence indicates many members of the superfamily of ABC transporter proteins protect cells by excreting xenobiotics, including ABC transporters that confer resistance to drugs and chemotherapy agents in humans and resistance to insecticides other than Bt in arthropods [20,28,29]. Although the association between mutations in or down-regulation of the ABC transporter protein ABCC2 and resistance of lepidopterans to Bt toxins in the Cry1 family is well established, less is known about its paralog ABCC3 and interactions between ABCC2 and ABCC3 [30][31][32][33][34][35][36][37][38][39][40].
Here we used CRISPR/Cas9 editing to determine the independent and joint effects of knocking out the genes encoding ABCC2 and ABCC3 in the cotton bollworm, Helicoverpa armigera. This lepidopteran is one of the world's most devastating crop pests and has recently invaded the Americas [41,42]. Although Bt cotton producing Cry1Ac remains effective against this major pest in China, many strains of this species have been selected for resistance to Cry1Ac in the laboratory and ''early warning" of increases in the frequency of resistance to Cry1Ac has been reported from field populations in northern China exposed intensively to Bt cotton [43][44][45]. Previous work showed that 1100-fold resistance to activated Cry1Ac toxin in the lab-selected LF60 strain of this pest from China was linked with a 6-bp deletion in the gene encoding ABCC2 (HaABCC2) that disrupts splicing and introduces a premature stop codon [33]. This resistance was associated with increased susceptibility to two insecticides derived from soil bacteria other than Bt (abamectin from Streptomyces avermitilis and spinetoram from Saccharopolyspora spinosa, [46]). These previous results support the hypothesis that Bt resistance mutations disrupting ABC transporters interfere with the protective function of the transporters and thereby increase susceptibility to other insecticides [20,46]. However, the previous work did not examine ABCC3 and analyzed a resistant strain generated by conventional laboratory selection, which could have selected for resistance alleles at HaABCC2 and other loci. In contrast with the previous results, we discovered that knocking out HaABCC2 alone caused only 3.8-fold resistance to Cry1Ac, whereas knocking out both HaABCC2 and HaABCC3 caused >15,000-fold resistance to Cry1Ac, but did not increase susceptibility to abamectin or spinetoram.

CRISPR/Cas9 knockouts of HaABCC2, HaABCC3, and both
To knockout HaABCC2 and create knockout strain C2-KO, we injected C2-sgRNA1 and C2-sgRNA2 into eggs of susceptible strain SCD and reared the resulting neonates to adults (G 0 ) ( Table 1). To produce G 1 progeny, we crossed the G 0 adults with SCD (female G 0 X male SCD and female SCD X male G 0 ). After pupation of the G 1 , we used exuviate-based PCR with specific primers (Table 2) to detect DNA fragments with knockouts in HaABCC2. Direct sequencing revealed three different HaABCC2 knockout sequences from the 10 individuals analyzed (Fig 1C). Each of the three knockout sequences lacks~7 kb between exons 4 and 24 ( Fig 1C). To generate G 2 , we pooled the 10 G 1 adults (six females and four males) for mating. After pupation of the G 2 , we used exuviate-based PCR to detect individuals with knockouts at both HaABCC2 alleles (including those homozygous for the same knockout and those with two different knockouts), from which we established knockout strain C2-KO.
We used analogous procedures to knockout HaABCC3 and create knockout strain C3-KO. Eggs were injected with C3-sgRNA1 and C3-sgRNA2. Direct sequencing of G 1 with exuviatebased PCR revealed only one type of HaABCC3 knockout among the 13 individuals sequenced. This knockout lacks~22 kb between exon 4 and 25. To generate G 2 , we pooled the 13 G 1 adults (five females and eight males) for mating. After pupation of the G 2 , we used exuviate-based PCR to detect individuals homozygous for the single HaABCC3 knockout, from which we began knockout strain C3-KO.
To produce strain C2/3-KO with both HaABCC2 and HaABCC3 knocked out, we injected C2-KO eggs with C3-sgRNA1 and C3-sgRNA2. As described above, the G 0 adults were crossed with SCD to generate G 1 . Using exuviate-based PCR with the primers designed to detect the

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Bt toxicity to cotton bollworm mediated by two ABC transporters intended 22.8 kb deletion in HaABCC3 (Fig 1, C3-tar1-F/C3-tar2-R, Table 2), we did not find this large deletion in any of the 96 individuals tested. However, we did find a different deletion that was shared by eight G 1 individuals: 13 bp missing at the C3-target 1 site and 7 bp missing at the C3-target 2 site. These eight G 1 adults (four of each sex) were pooled for mating to produce G 2 ( Fig 1C) ( Table 1). Screening of 768 G 2 larvae at the diagnostic concentration of Cry1Ac (0.05 μg Cry1Ac per cm 2 ) yielded 21.1% (162/768) survival (Table 1). From the screened larvae, we used direct sequencing to determine the HaABCC2 and HaABCC3 genotype of 24 survivors and 24 dead individuals. All of the survivors had knockout sequences at both alleles for HaABCC2 and HaABCC3, whereas none of the 24 dead larvae had knockouts at both alleles for both genes (five homozygous wild type at both loci and 19 with a knockout allele and a wild type allele at both loci). The proportion of individuals with a knockout at both alleles of both genes was significantly higher in the survivors than the dead larvae (Fisher's exact test, P = 6 X 10 −14 ), indicating strong genetic linkage between the double knockout and resistance to Cry1Ac. We pooled the 162 survivors to establish double knockout strain C2/ 3-KO. Based on the frequency of heterozygotes in the G 1 of 0.068 to 0.104 (Table 1), we infer the germline conversion rates in the G 0 were at least approximately 7 to 10%. For the G 2 , which were generated by matings between G 1 heterozygotes, the expected frequency of homozygous mutants is 0.25. The observed frequency of homozygous mutants for G 2 was significantly lower than expected for the knockouts of HaABCC2 and HaABCC3 alone (0.100 and 0.094, respectively, Table 1; Fisher's exact test, P < 0.01 in each case), but not for the second knockout used to generate C2/3-KO (0.211, Fisher's exact test, P = 0.078). The significantly lower than expected frequency of homozygous mutants in G 2 for each single knockout may reflect a fitness cost in these insects relative to insects homozygous or heterozygous for the wild-type (susceptible) allele. By contrast, in the double knockouts, all G 2 individuals were homozygous for the C2 knockout. Thus, the lack of a significant deficit of homozygous mutants in G 2 suggests the fitness of individuals with the double knockout was not substantially lower than the fitness of individuals with only the C2 knockout.

Effects of knockouts on susceptibility to three Cry1A toxins
Relative to its susceptible parent strain SCD, the resistance ratio of double knockout strain C2/ 3-KO was >300 for Cry1Aa, >1400 for Cry1Ab, and >15,000 for Cry1Ac (Table 3). Results at the highest concentration tested of each toxin show mortality of C2/3-KO was 14.6% at 50 μg Cry1Aa per cm 2 diet, 0% at 50 μg Cry1Ab per cm 2 diet, and 16.7% at 80 μg Cry1Ac per cm 2 diet (Table 3). Knockout strain C2-KO was not resistant to Cry1Aa, but had significant, Table 2. Primers used to identify mutations at four target sites.

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Bt toxicity to cotton bollworm mediated by two ABC transporters 4.0-fold resistance to Cry1Ab and 3.8-fold resistance to Cry1Ac (Table 3). Knockout strain C3-KO was not resistant to any of the three Cry1A toxins (Table 3). Mortality at the diagnostic concentration of Cry1Ac (0.05 μg Cry1Ac per cm 2 ) was 100% for SCD and 0% for C2/3-KO (Fig 2), consistent with the high resistance ratio for the double knockout strain reported above. Also consistent with the results above, mortality at this concentration was slightly and significantly lower for C2-KO (92%) than SCD, but did not differ between C3-KO (100%) and SCD (Fig 2).

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Bt toxicity to cotton bollworm mediated by two ABC transporters

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Bt toxicity to cotton bollworm mediated by two ABC transporters

Inheritance of resistance to Cry1Ac
We evaluated inheritance of resistance based on mortality caused by the diagnostic concentration of Cry1Ac. For the F 1 progeny from each of the six interstrain crosses between SCD, C2/ 3-KO, C2-KO, and C3-KO, mortality at this concentration did not differ significantly between reciprocal crosses, indicating no sex linkage or maternal effects were evident. Because mortality did not differ significantly between the two reciprocal crosses for each interstrain cross, we pooled the results of the two reciprocal crosses for each of the six interstrain crosses. Mortality was 100% for SCD and for the F 1 progeny from C2/3-KO X SCD and C2-KO X SCD, indicating completely recessive inheritance of resistance at the diagnostic concentration (Fig 2). Likewise, relative to SCD, mortality was not significantly lower for the F 1 progeny from C2-KO × C3-KO (98%, Fisher's exact test, P = 0.50), which are expected to have one knockout allele and one wild type allele at each locus. However, relative to SCD, mortality was significantly lower for the F 1 progeny from C2/3-KO × C3-KO (93%) and C2/3-KO × C2-KO (76%) (Fisher's exact tests, P = 0.014 and 5 X 10 −8 , respectively, Fig 2). Mortality was also significantly lower for the F 1 progeny from C2/3-KO X C2-KO than from C2/3-KO X C3-KO (Fisher's exact test, P = 0.0024).

Effects of knockouts on susceptibility to three insecticides
Relative to SCD, none of the three knockout strains showed significantly different susceptibility to the insecticides abamectin, spinetoram or chlorantraniliprole (Table 4).

Discussion
In laboratory bioassays with H. armigera, we discovered that the CRISPR-mediated double knockout of HaABCC2 and HaABCC3 caused >15,000-fold resistance to Cry1Ac, whereas knocking out HaABCC2 alone caused only 3.8-fold resistance to Cry1Ac and knocking out HaABCC3 alone did not decrease susceptibility. Likewise, at a single concentration of Cry1Ac, mortality was 0% for the double knockout strain C2/3-KO, 92% for strain C2-KO with HaABCC2 knocked out, and 100% for strain C3-KO with HaABCC3 knocked out. These results suggest that to a large extent, HaABCC2 and HaABCC3 act in parallel in the toxic

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Bt toxicity to cotton bollworm mediated by two ABC transporters pathway of Cry1Ac, with complete or nearly complete susceptibility retained when only one of these proteins is disrupted (Fig 3). The extremely high resistance to Cry1Ac generated from knocking out both HaABCC2 and HaABCC3 implies that toxicity of Cry1Ac requires at least one of the two proteins encoded by these genes. The results also suggest that when each protein is considered alone, HaABCC2 is somewhat more important for susceptibility than HaABCC3, because knocking out HaABCC2 alone caused low, but significant resistance, whereas knocking out HaABCC3 alone caused none.
The results reported here from bioassays of the F 1 progeny of various crosses show recessive inheritance of the resistance that was caused by knocking out HaABCC2 alone or HaABCC2 and HaABCC3 together. Moreover, substantial susceptibility to Cry1Ac was retained in F 1 progeny that had at least one wild type HaABCC2 or HaABCC3 allele. Consistent with the results from strains C2-KO and C3-KO described above, results from the F 1 progeny show that a single wild type HaABCC2 allele conferred greater susceptibility than a single wild type HaABCC3 allele.

Bt toxicity to cotton bollworm mediated by two ABC transporters
In H. armigera, the toxic pathway for Cry1Ac also requires wild type cadherin (HaCad) (Fig  3), based on previous results showing that knockout of the HaCad gene caused 549-fold resistance to Cry1Ac [47]. Also, the single amino acid substitution L31S in HaTSPAN1 produced 125-fold resistance [44]. Whereas HaABCC2, HaABCC3, and HaCad probably act as toxin receptors in H. armigera, HaTSPAN1 does not, because a strain with HaTSPAN1 knocked out was completely susceptible [44]. The nature of the Cry1Ac-HaTSPAN1 interaction and the temporal sequence of interactions between Cry1Ac and the four aforementioned midgut proteins affecting its toxicity (HaABCC2, HaABCC3, HaCad and HaTSPAN1) remain to be determined.
It is useful to compare the results here with CRISPR-mediated knockouts of HaABCC2, HaABCC3, or both with previously reported resistance genetically linked with HaABCC2 in the LF60 strain of H. armigera that was selected conventionally by exposing larvae to Cry1Ac in the laboratory [33]. In LF60, mis-splicing of HaABCC2 introduces a stop codon yielding a truncated HaABCC2 protein [33]. Consistent with the results here, resistance to Cry1Ac was recessively inherited in LF60. However, relative to its unselected, susceptible parent strain (LF), resistance to activated Cry1Ac toxin was 1100-fold in LF60, which is greater than the 4-fold resistance in C2-KO seen here-even though both strains are not expected to produce functional HaABCC2 protein. The difference in results between studies could reflect differences between the strains studied, the experimental methods, or both. Although we used Cry1Ac produced by transgenic E. coli and the previous study used Cry1Ac produced by the HD73 strain of B. thuringiensis [33], this minor difference is unlikely to be responsible for the resistance to activated Cry1Ac toxin of only 4-fold in C2-KO versus 1100-fold in LF60. For LF60, the genetic linkage of resistance to Cry1Ac with mutant HaABCC2 does not exclude the possibility of mutations in HaABCC3 or other nearby genes that were not examined. Thus, one potential explanation is that, in addition to mis-splicing of HaABCC2, LF60 had a mutation in HaABCC3 or another nearby gene that caused the 1100-fold resistance in concert with its HaABCC2 mutation.
Similar to the results here where >15,000-fold resistance to Cry1Ac in C2/3-KO did not affect susceptibility to the ryanoid insecticide chlorantraniliprole, resistance of LF60 to Cry1Ac did not affect susceptibility to endosulfan (a cyclodiene), phoxim (an organophosphate), or cyhalothrin (a pyrethroid, [46]). However, susceptibility to the bacterially derived insecticides abamectin and spinetoram was unaffected in C2/3-KO here, but increased significantly in LF60 [46]. Similar to the explanation above, we cannot exclude the possibility that the negative cross-resistance in LF60 was caused by one or more mutations other than the HaABCC2 mutation.
The results here showing that mutations in ABCC2 alone caused only about 4-fold resistance to Cry1Ac differ from previous studies of H. armigera and seven other lepidopteran species, where authors concluded that higher levels of resistance to Cry1Ab, Cry1Ac, Cry1Ca, or Cry1Fa is associated with alterations of ABCC2 [30][31][32][34][35][36][37][38][39][40]. In most of these cases, as noted above for the previous work with H. armigera [33], we cannot exclude the hypothesis that in addition to mutations affecting ABCC2, mutations affected either the gene encoding ABCC3 or another nearby gene. However, in Plutella xylostella, resistance to Cry1Ac caused by CRISPR-mediated gene editing was 724-fold for knocking out PxABCC2 alone and 423-fold for knocking out PxABCC3 alone [36]. RNAi suppression of expression of either of these genes also significantly reduced susceptibility to Cry1Ac in P. xylostella [35]. Similarly, in Spodoptera exigua, RNAi suppression of either SeABCC2 or SeABCC3 alone significantly reduced susceptibility to Cry1Ac and Cry1Ca [34]. In Spodoptera frugiperda, knocking out SfABCC2 alone caused 118-fold resistance to Cry1F [40]. These results imply that ABCC2 and

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Bt toxicity to cotton bollworm mediated by two ABC transporters ABCC3 are not functionally redundant in the toxic pathways of the Cry1 proteins evaluated in P. xylostella, S. exigua, and S. frugiperda.
Field-evolved resistance is more likely if one mutation is sufficient to substantially decrease susceptibility than if mutations in two different genes are required, as reported here for HaABCC2 and HaABCC3 and resistance to Cry1Ac. In a related example, mutations in Trichoplusia ni affecting either TnABCC2 or TnCad alone caused less than 8-fold resistance to the genetically modified Bt toxin Cry1Ac-A01s, whereas knocking out both yielded 3800-fold resistance [48].
Although field-evolved resistance of Pectinophora gossypiella to Cry2Ab in India is associated with mutations affecting ABCA2 [24] and many cases of laboratory-selected resistance to Cry1 toxins are associated with mutations affecting ABCC2 [30,31,[34][35][36][37]40], we know of only two species with field-evolved resistance where a mutation affecting ABCC2 is putatively implicated. In the GLEN-Cry1Ac-BCS strain of T. ni isolated from a greenhouse population in western Canada that evolved resistance to sprays containing a mixture of Bt toxins, resistance to Cry1Ac is genetically linked with TnABCC2, but the specific mutation has not been identified [31]. In S. frugiperda resistance to Cry1Fa in Puerto Rico, a mutant allele (called SfABCC2mut or R 1 ) isolated from field populations harbors a 2-bp insertion in SfABCC2, which yields a premature stop codon and is associated with recessive resistance to Cry1Fa and cross-resistance to Cry1A.105 [38,39]. However, in 2007, soon after field failures were reported and resistance to Cry1Fa was confirmed with bioassays [49], the frequency of R 1 was 0 and 0.014 at the two sites studied in Puerto Rico (n = 48 and 145, respectively, [38]). Thus, the frequency of R 1 was too low in 2007 to account for the practical resistance observed then. Paradoxically, R 1 was more common in Puerto Rico from 2009 to 2017 [38,39], after Cry1Fa-producing corn was reportedly withdrawn from the market there [49]. This suggests that R 1 was favored by other types of Bt corn planted after 2007, such as multi-toxin corn producing Cry1Fa, Cry1A.105, or related toxins. Nonetheless, the frequency of R 1 R 1 homozygotes was less than 0.50 in five of the six samples from 2009 to 2017 (Table S1 of [38], [39]). R 1 was not detected in Cry1Fa-resistant populations in Florida, the Dominican Republic, or Brazil; and a second resistance allele (R 2 ) of SfABCC2 was isolated from the field in Puerto Rico, but its frequency was not reported [38,39]. A recent study identified many mutations in SfABCC2 associated with field-selected resistance to Cry1Fa in Brazil [50]. As far as we know, mutations in ABCC3 were not evaluated in the cases of field-evolved resistance in T. ni and S. frugiperda cited above. To better understand the practical impact of ABCC2 and ABCC3 resistance mutations, it will be useful to track their frequency in parallel with bioassays in field populations of H. armigera and other pests.

Insect strains and rearing
We used four strains of H. armigera: the susceptible strain SCD, and three knockout strains generated from SCD in this study (C2-KO, C3-KO, and C2/3-KO). SCD was started with insects collected from Côte D'Ivoire (Ivory Coast, Africa) in the 1970s [51] and had been maintained in the laboratory without exposure to insecticides or Bt toxins for more than 30 years. C2-KO, C3-KO, and C2/3-KO had knockouts of HaABCC2, HaABCC3, or both, respectively, as detailed below.
All larvae were reared on a diet based on wheat germ and soybean powder at 26 ± 1 o C, 60 ± 10% relative humidity and a photoperiod of 16 h light: 8 h dark. A 10% sugar solution was supplied for adults.

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Bt toxicity to cotton bollworm mediated by two ABC transporters

Embryo microinjection
Microinjection was done as reported previously [47]. Briefly, fertilized eggs laid within 2 hours were washed off from the gauzes in 1% sodium hypochlorite solution and rinsed with distilled water for three times, which was followed by suction filtration. Next the eggs were lined up on double-sided adhesive tape attached to a microscope slide. Each embryo was injected with approximately 1 nl of solution containing sgRNA and Cas9 protein. The injected eggs were incubated at 26 ± 1 o C until hatching.
The C2-sgRNA1 and C2-sgRNA2 were co-injected to knock out the most of the full length of the genomic sequence of HaABCC2, while C3-sgRNA1 and C3-sgRNA2 were designed to delete a 22.8-kb fragment of HaABCC3 (Fig 1B). All of the sgRNAs were effective at the final concentration of 500 ng/μl with Cas9 protein (200 ng/μl).

Identification of mutation types induced by CRISPR/Cas9
Direct sequencing based on PCR products was conducted by TsingKe (Nanjing, China) to detect the mutation types on different target sites. Table 2 lists the primers. We used primer pair C2-tar1-F/C2-tar2-R to detect the 7.36-kb fragment knockout of HaABCC2, and C3-tar1-F/C3-tar2-R to detect the 22.8-kb fragment knockout of HaABCC3. The indel (insertion or deletion) mutation types were analyzed using a previously reported method [52]. dispensed into each well (surface area = 2 cm 2 ) of a 24-well plate. After the diet cooled and solidified, 100 μl of the dilution containing the desired concentration of Bt toxin or insecticide was applied evenly to the diet surface in each well. After the wells dried at room temperature, we put in each well a single unfed neonate for Bt toxins or second instar for insecticides. We tested 48 larvae at each concentration. Mortality was recorded after 7 days for Bt toxins or 3 days for insecticides. When mortality was scored, larvae were considered dead if they were dead or weighed less than 5 mg for Bt toxins or could not move normally for insecticides.
To determine the LC 50 (concentration of a Bt toxin or insecticide killing 50% of larvae), we tested a series of concentrations including untreated diet as a control. Control mortality ranged from 0 to 2% (mean = 0.5%). The LC 50 (concentration of a Bt toxin or insecticide killing 50% of larvae) and the 95% fiducial limits of the LC 50 for each strain were calculated with probit analysis of the mortality data using PoloPlus [53]. Two LC 50 values were considered significantly different if their 95% fiducial limits did not overlap. We calculated the resistance ratio for each toxin and insecticide tested as the LC 50 for a strain divided by the LC 50 for SCD. We also used Fisher's exact test to determine if mortality at a diagnostic concentration of Cry1Ac (0.05 μg Cry1Ac per cm 2 ) for each of three knockout strains differed significantly from mortality for SCD (n = 96 larvae per strain).

Inheritance of resistance to Cry1Ac
To evaluate inheritance of resistance to Cry1Ac, we made all 12 possible interstrain reciprocal crosses (10 males X 10 females of each strain for each cross) between the SCD, C2-KO, C3-KO and C2/3-KO strains. In bioassays at 0.05 μg Cry1Ac per cm 2 diet, we tested F 1 offspring (48 larvae) from each of the 12 reciprocal crosses. To evaluate sex linkage and maternal effects, we used Fisher's exact test to determine if differences occurred between the two reciprocal crosses for each interstrain cross (e.g., female SCD X male C2-KO vs. female C2-KO X male SCD). We also used Fisher's exact test to determine if mortality for F 1 progeny from each of the six interstrain crosses (n = 96 larvae per cross) differed significantly from mortality for SCD and if mortality differed significantly between the F 1 progeny from C2/3-KO X C2-KO and C2/3-KO X C3-KO.