Oxygen stress on age-stage, two-sex life tables and transcriptomic response of diamondback moth (Plutella xylostella)

Author:

Liu Tian-sheng123,Zhu Xiang-yu12,He Di12,You Min-sheng12,You Shi-jun124ORCID

Affiliation:

1. State Key Laboratory of Ecological Pest Control for Fujian and Taiwan Crops, Institute of Applied Ecology, Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University , Fuzhou 350002 , P.R. China

2. Ministerial and Provincial Joint Innovation Centre for Safety Production of Cross-Strait Crops, Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University , Fuzhou 350002 , P.R. China

3. Institution of Fruit Tree Research, Guangdong Academy of Agricultural Sciences , Guangzhou, 510640 , P.R. China

4. BGI-Sanya , Sanya 572025 , P.R. China

Abstract

AbstractElucidating the genetic basis of local adaption is one of the important tasks in evolutionary biology. The Qinghai-Tibet Plateau has the highest biodiversity for an extreme environment worldwide, and provides an ideal natural laboratory to study adaptive evolution. The diamondback moth (DBM), Plutella xylostella, is one of the most devastating pests of the global Brassica industry. A highly heterozygous genome of this pest has facilitated its adaptation to a variety of complex environments, and so provides an ideal model to study fast adaptation. We conducted a pilot study combining RNA-seq with an age-stage, two-sex life table to study the effects of oxygen deprivation on DBM. The developmental periods of all instars were significantly shorter in the hypoxic environment. We compared the transcriptomes of DBM from Fuzhou, Fujian (low-altitude) and Lhasa, Tibet (high-altitude) under hypoxia treatment in a hypoxic chamber. Some DEGs are enriched in pathways associated with DNA replication, such as DNA repair, nucleotide excision repair, base excision repair, mismatch repair and homologous recombination. The pathways with significant changes were associated with metabolism process and cell development. Thus, we assumed that insects could adapt to different environments by regulating their metabolism. Our findings indicated that although adaptive mechanisms to hypoxia in different DBM strains could be similar, DBM individuals from Tibet had superior tolerance to hypoxia compared with those of Fuzhou. Local adaptation of the Tibetan colony was assumed to be responsible for this difference. Our research suggests novel mechanisms of insect responses to hypoxia stress.

Funder

National Natural Science, Foundation of China

Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University Science and Technology Innovation Fund Project

Outstanding Young Scientific Research Talents Program of Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Insect Science,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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