Insects (Jun 2024)

Death-Associated Protein-1 Plays a Role in the Reproductive Development of <i>Nilaparvata lugens</i> and the Transovarial Transmission of Its Yeast-Like Symbiont

  • Jian-Bin Yu,
  • Xin Lv,
  • Qian Liu,
  • Jia-Yu Tu,
  • Xiao-Ping Yu,
  • Yi-Peng Xu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/insects15060425
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 6
p. 425

Abstract

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Death-associated protein-1 (DAP-1) plays a crucial role in cell growth, migration, autophagy, and apoptosis in mammals. However, its function in insects remains unclear. In the present study, we cloned and identified Nilaparvata lugens DAP-1 (NlDAP-1). NlDAP-1 was expressed during all developmental stages and in all tissues of N. lugens, being particularly higher in the ovaries of female adults. RNAi with double-stranded NlDAP-1 RNA significantly inhibited the expression of NlDAP-1, leading to premature death (dying seven days earlier), delayed ovarian development, and fewer offspring (76.7% reduction in eggs with 77.4% reduction in egg hatching rate). Additionally, an immunofluorescence experiment showed that NlDAP-1 was highly expressed when yeast-like symbionts (YLSs) entered N. lugens oocytes, and inhibiting the expression of NlDAP-1 disturbed the process; the RNAi of NlDAP-1 caused a 34.9% reduction in the YLSs that entered oocytes. These results indicate that NlDAP-1 plays a crucial role in the reproductive development of N. lugens and the transovarial transmission of its YLSs.

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