Insects (Aug 2012)

RNA-Seq Study of Microbially Induced Hemocyte Transcripts from Larval <em>Heliothis virescens</em> (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae)

  • Kent S. Shelby,
  • Holly J. R. Popham

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/insects3030743
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 3
pp. 743 – 762

Abstract

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Larvae of the tobacco budworm are major polyphagous pests throughout the Americas. Development of effective microbial biopesticides for this and related noctuid pests has been stymied by the natural resistance mediated innate immune response. Hemocytes play an early and central role in activating and coordinating immune responses to entomopathogens. To approach this problem we completed RNA-seq expression profiling of hemocytes collected from larvae following an <em>in vivo</em> challenge with bacterial and fungal cell wall components to elicit an immune response. A <em>de novo</em> exome assembly was constructed by combination of sequence tags from all treatments. Sequence tags from each treatment were aligned separately with the assembly to measure expression. The resulting table of differential expression had > 22,000 assemblies each with a distinct combination of annotation and expression. Within these assemblies > 1,400 were upregulated and > 1,500 downregulated by immune activation with bacteria or fungi. Orthologs to innate immune components of other insects were identified including pattern recognition, signal transduction pathways, antimicrobial peptides and enzymes, melanization and coagulation. Additionally orthologs of components regulating hemocytic functions such as autophagy, apoptosis, phagocytosis and nodulation were identified. Associated cellular oxidative defenses and detoxification responses were identified providing a comprehensive snapshot of the early response to elicitation.

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