Trypsin‐encoding gene function of efficient star polycation nanomaterial‐mediated dsRNA feeding delivery system of Grapholita molesta

Author:

Lv Dongbiao1,Kassen Kuanysh1,Men Chunxiao1,Yang Xiaoyan1,Pan Dandan1,Wang Xuecheng1,Wang Nan1,Wang Ping2,Yuan Xiangqun1,Li Yiping1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Key Laboratory of Plant Protection Resources and Pest Management of Ministry of Education, Key Laboratory of Integrated Pest Management on Crops in Northwestern Loess Plateau of Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs College of Plant Protection, Northwest A&F University Yangling China

2. Department of Entomology Cornell University Geneva NY USA

Abstract

AbstractBACKGROUNDGrapholita molesta is an important and harmful fruit pest worldwide, with widespread feeding hosts. Trypsin, an indispensable hydrolytic digestive protease in the insect gut, is crucial in digestion, growth and development. We analyzed the characteristics of the trypsin‐encoding genes, screened for the optimal dose of RNAi mediated by nanocarriers, and investigated various indices of larval growth and development of G. molesta.RESULTSGut content (GC) and RNase A degraded double‐stranded RNA (dsRNA), with a faster degradation rate at higher concentrations. Star polycation (SPc) nanomaterials protected dsGFP from degradation by anion–cation binding and did not migrate through agarose gel. The key conserved motifs of the trypsin‐encoding genes were similar, exhibiting high homology with those in other lepidopteran insects. An interference efficiency of ≈70% was achieved with SPc nanomaterial‐mediated RNA interference with 0.05 μg dsRNA. The efficiency of continuous interference was stable. Trypsin activity, body weight of 8‐day‐old larvae, pupal weight and emergence rate were significantly reduced, and the larval stage was significantly prolonged.CONCLUSIONThe investigated trypsin gene is a key target gene in the growth and development of G. molesta. We investigated the efficiency and convenience of feeding SPc nanomaterials in a functional study of insects. Our results provide valuable data for the development of efficient trypsin‐targeting pesticides. © 2024 Society of Chemical Industry.

Publisher

Wiley

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