Rocaglamide, a highly substituted benzofuran, was isolated and identified as the main biologically active component in Aglaia elaeagnoidea (syn. A. roxburghiana) for gram pod borer Helicoverpa armigera (Hu¨bner). Addition of rocaglamide to an artificial diet retarded the growth of neonate larvae in a dose-dependent manner with EC 50 values of 0.76 p.p.m. These values compared favourably with azadirachtin (EC 50 ¼ 0.23 p.p.m.). However, azadirachtin was apparently more potent than rocaglamide in inducing growth inhibition via oral administration to these first stadium larvae. The candidate compound was found to have LD 50 and LD 95 values of 0.40 and 1.02 lg per larva, respectively, in topical application against third instar larvae 96 h post-treatment. However, these values for azadirachtin were 8.16 and 25.8 lg per larva for the same period. This shows that azadirachtin was less effective against third instar H. armigera larvae in inducing acute toxicity via topical treatment in comparison with rocaglamide. However, severe morphological larval deformities were observed in such azadirachtin-treated larvae during the process of ecdysis. The cytotoxic nature of rocaglamide was established by evaluating dietary utilization and the results did not implicate any antifeedant effect but the toxicity-mediated effect due to reduced efficiency of conversion of ingested food. It was obvious that feeding deterrence is not the primary mode of action but a centrally mediated effect, which could be due to the induced cytotoxicity at non-specific cellular levels.
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