Effects of Chromium Exposure on the Gene Expression of the Midgut in Silkworms, Bombyx mori

Author:

Rong Wantao1,Chen Yazhen2,Lu Jieyou1,Huang Shuiwang2,Xin Lei1,Guan Delong12ORCID,Li Xiaodong12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Guangxi Key Laboratory of Sericulture Ecology and Applied Intelligent Technology, Hechi University, Hechi 546300, China

2. Guangxi Collaborative Innovation Center of Modern Sericulture and Silk, Hechi University, Hechi 546300, China

Abstract

Chromium is a severe heavy metal pollutant with significant environmental risks. The effects of Chromium on the digestion of Bombyx mori (silkworms) are of particular importance due to their ecological and economic significance. Herein, RNA sequencing was conducted on nine midgut samples from silkworms exposed to control, 12 g/kg and 24 g/kg Chromium chemical diets. Comparative transcriptomics revealed that under moderate Chromium exposure, there was a significant increase in up-regulated genes (1268 up-regulated to 857 down-regulated), indicating a stimulation response. At higher stress levels, a weakened survival response was observed, with a decrease in up-regulated genes and an increase in down-regulated genes (374 up-regulated to 399 down-regulated). A notable shift in cellular responses under medium chromium exposure was exposed, signifying the activation of crucial metabolic and transport systems and an elevation in cellular stress and toxicity mechanisms. The observation of up-regulated gene expression within xenobiotic metabolism pathways suggests a heightened defense against Chromium-induced oxidative stress, which was primarily through the involvement of antioxidant enzymes. Conversely, high-dose Chromium exposure down-regulates the folate biosynthesis pathway, indicating biological toxicity. Two novel genes responsive to pressure were identified, which could facilitate future stress adaptation understanding. The findings provide insights into the molecular mechanisms underlying silkworms’ digestion response to Chromium exposure and could inform its biological toxicity.

Funder

Special Project of Guangxi Collaborative Innovation Center of Modern Sericulture and Silk

Guangxi University Young and Middle-aged Teachers’ Basic Research Ability Improvement Project

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Genetics (clinical),Genetics

Reference46 articles.

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