褐飞虱
基因敲除
生物
RNA干扰
基因沉默
铁蛋白
基因
遗传学
生殖力
RNA沉默
核糖核酸
生物化学
医学
人口
环境卫生
作者
Yan Shen,Yuan‐Zhi Chen,Chuan‐Xi Zhang
摘要
Abstract BACKGROUND The brown planthopper (BPH), Nilaparvata lugens , is the most destructive rice insect pest. To exploit potential target genes for applications in transgenic rice to control this sap‐sucking insect pest, three ferritin genes were functionally characterized in this study. RESULTS In this study, three ferritin genes, that is, ferritin 1 Heavy Chain ( NlFer1 ), ferritin 2 Light Chain ( NlFer2 ) and soma ferritin ( Nlsoma‐Fer ), were identified from BPH. Tissue‐specific analyses showed that all three genes were highly expressed in the gut. Although double‐stranded RNA injection‐mediated RNA inference (RNAi) of Nlsoma‐Fer expression resulted in only < 14% mortality in BPH, knockdown of NlFer1 or NlFer2 led to retarded growth and 100% mortality in young nymphs, and downregulation of NlFer1 and NlFer2 in newly emerged female adults caused undeveloped ovaries and severely inhibited oocyte growth, resulting in extremely low fecundity and a zero hatching rate. Knockdown of NlFer1 and NlFer2 caused similar phenotypes in BPH, indicating that they function together, as in many other animals. The results demonstrated that NlFer1 and NlFer2 were essential for BPH development and reproduction. BPHs showed high sensitivity to both ds NlFer1 and ds NlFer2 , and injection of only 0.625 ng ds NlFer1 per BPH resulted in 100% mortality. Additionally, the effectiveness of feeding ds NlFer1 and ds NlFer2 to BPH nymphs was further proven. CONCLUSION NlFer1 and NlFer2 are essential for BPH development and reproduction, and the insect is highly sensitive to their depletion, suggesting that the two gut‐highly‐expressed genes are promising candidates for application in RNAi‐based control of this destructive pest.
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