| Literature DB >> 12546706 |
Gro V Amdam1, Zilá L P Simões, Karina R Guidugli, Kari Norberg, Stig W Omholt.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The ability to manipulate the genetic networks underlying the physiological and behavioural repertoires of the adult honeybee worker (Apis mellifera) is likely to deepen our understanding of issues such as learning and memory generation, ageing, and the regulatory anatomy of social systems in proximate as well as evolutionary terms. Here we assess two methods for probing gene function by RNA interference (RNAi) in adult honeybees.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2003 PMID: 12546706 PMCID: PMC149360 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6750-3-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Biotechnol ISSN: 1472-6750 Impact factor: 2.563
Figure 1Wild-type control.Time course illustrating individual variation in vitellogenin mRNA expression vs. vitellogenin protein levels in wild-type controls. Total RNA loaded for Northern blot was 6 μg. An equal hemolymph volume of 0.1 μl was loaded for SDS-PAGE. Apo-lipoprotein I [40] and ribosomic RNA were included as controls.
Figure 2Targeted vitellogenin disruption. (a) Individual samples of workers injected as embryo and (b) workers injected as adults. All bees were sampled as 7 days old. Total RNA loaded was 6 μg, and an equal 0.1 μl hemolymph volume was loaded for SDS-PAGE. (c) Visualization of ~500 bp fragment in a worker injected as adult. Lane 1: Control. Lane 2: 6 μg total RNA. Lane 3: 20 μg total RNA. (d) Pooled samples of 10 workers each enriched with small RNA fragments. Two oligonucleotides (27 and 50 bp) were included as markers. Lane 1: Control. Lane 2: Adult workers injected with dsRNA at the preblastoderm stage. Lane 3: Intra-abdominally injected workers.
Figure 3Sequence dependent Northern blot. Hybridization prepared with (a) AP4a5, and (b) AmR9. Lane 1: Control. Lane 2: Sample from an intra-abdominally injected worker, 6 μg total RNA. Lane 3: Original dsRNA template, 0.5 Ηg.