| Literature DB >> 25202604 |
Abstract
PREMISE OF THE STUDY: A PCR-based method of identifying ingested plant DNA in gut contents of Melanoplus grasshoppers was developed. Although previous investigations have focused on a variety of insects, there are no protocols available for plant DNA detection developed for grasshoppers, agricultural pests that significantly influence plant community composition. • METHODS ANDEntities:
Keywords: grasshoppers; insect gut content; plant DNA barcoding; trophic interactions
Year: 2014 PMID: 25202604 PMCID: PMC4103608 DOI: 10.3732/apps.1300082
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Appl Plant Sci ISSN: 2168-0450 Impact factor: 1.936
Protocol for dissecting grasshoppers and tissue preparation. Developed by A. Avanesyan. The details for isolating a gut and preparing foregut and combined midgut+hindgut parts are presented in Video 1.
| 1. Take a frozen grasshopper from the freezer and rinse it with 70% ethanol. | 2. Use forceps and scissors to carefully remove hind legs and wings. | 3. Put the grasshopper on its side and use insect pins to anchor it to the dissecting pad. | 4. Use scissors to cut the exoskeleton along the side. Start with the last segment of the abdomen and move slowly toward the head. | 5. Carefully pull out the digestive system (if dissecting a female, remove bright yellow ovaries and fat bodies from the abdomen). | 6. Place the whole gut in a 1.5-mL microcentrifuge tube with 70% ethanol and store it overnight before the DNA extraction. Skip this step if you immediately proceed with DNA extraction (rinse the gut with 70% ethanol for 10 s). | |
| 1. Place an isolated gut on the dissecting pad ( | 2. Review a scheme of the internal structure of the grasshopper to match the main parts of the digestive system ( | 3. Find the border between foregut and combined midgut+hindgut parts ( | 4. Use a scalpel to separate foregut and combined midgut+hindgut parts. | 5. Place foregut and combined midgut+hindgut parts separately in 1.5-mL microcentrifuge tubes with 70% ethanol and store them overnight before the DNA extraction ( | ||
| Small vinyl dissecting pad (11 3/4 × 8 in; Carolina Biological Supply Company, Burlington, North Carolina, USA) | Standard dissecting set (fine scissors, straight, 4 1/2 in; fine forceps, straight, 4 1/2 in; fine forceps, curved, 4 1/2 in; scalpel) | Insect pins (black enamel insect pins, size 2, pkg. of 100; BioQuip Products Inc., Rancho Dominguez, California, USA) | 70% ethanol | Microcentrifuge tubes (1.5 mL, Fisherbrand, cat. no. 05-408-129; Thermo Fisher Scientific, Waltham, Massachusetts, USA) | Scheme of internal structure of a grasshopper ( |
Use the whole body of a nymph grasshopper (due to its size) in DNA extraction. Remove hind legs if necessary.
Protocol for feeding experiments. Developed by A. Avanesyan.
| Note: All grasshoppers were starved for 24 h prior to all feeding experiments, which consisted of the following four types. | ||||||||
| 1. Place 12* nymph grasshoppers individually in small plastic containers. | 2. Clip equal number of leaves (∼0.3 g total weight) from plants that will be offered to the grasshoppers. For example, in this study, | 3. Put leaves together and wrap the clipped ends of leaves with moist filter paper. | 4. Place leaves on the bottom of each container and let grasshoppers feed for 3.5 h. | 5. Randomly choose seven nymphs that ate the most leaf tissue and place them separately in new containers. Other grasshoppers should be continued to be maintained in the laboratory for other feeding experiments. | 6. Randomly take one of the seven selected grasshoppers, put it in a plastic bag, and freeze it immediately at −20°C. | 7. Freeze each of the rest of the selected grasshoppers at 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, and 12 h post-ingestion (PI) at −20°C in separate plastic bags. | 8. Freeze samples of leaf tissue (∼2.5 cm2) from both plant species at −20°C for genetic analysis. | |
| 1. Place 12 grasshoppers individually in small plastic containers. | 2. Clip equal number of leaves (∼0.3 g total weight) from | 3. See steps 3–8 above (from feeding experiment with nymph grasshoppers). | ||||||
| 1. Place seven grasshoppers in the same aluminum cage. | 2. Prepare a mixture of plants† collected on the study plot and place them in a glass vial with water. | 3. Place the vial with plants in the cage with grasshoppers. | 4. Let grasshoppers feed on this mixture of plants for two days. | 5. Randomly select one grasshopper, put it in a plastic bag, and freeze it immediately at −20°C. | 6. Remove the other grasshoppers from the cage and place them separately in small plastic containers. | 7. Freeze each of the rest of the grasshoppers at 2, 4, 6, 8, and 10 h PI at −20°C in separate plastic bags. | ||
| 1. Place six grasshoppers individually in small plastic containers. | 2. See steps 2–6 above (from feeding experiment with nymph grasshoppers). | 3. Freeze each of the rest of the grasshoppers at 1, 3, 8, 10, and 22 h PI at −20°C in separate plastic bags. (Two grasshoppers in the study did not eat, so the other four grasshoppers were frozen at 0, 1, 3, and 22 h PI at −20°C.) | ||||||
| Plastic containers (7 × 4.5 × 5 in; All Living Things Critter Totes, PetSmart, Inc., Phoenix, Arizona, USA) | Aluminum cage (16 × 16 × 20 in; Repti Breeze Aluminum Screen Cage, Zoo Med Laboratories, Inc., San Luis Obispo, California, USA) | Small Ziploc plastic bags for freezing |
Seven nymphs were actually frozen for the DNA extraction; a minimum of seven nymphs (12 were used in this study) need to be used in the feeding experiments in case some nymphs do not eat. There can be any number of extra grasshoppers.
In this study, several collected plants of the Poaceae, Asteraceae, Fabaceae, and Plantaginaceae families were used. To simulate natural feeding in the field, plant stems with leaves were placed in a glass vial with water to keep plants hydrated. The vial with plants was then placed in the cage with grasshoppers.
Video 1.Demonstration of grasshopper dissection detailing the procedure for isolating the gut and preparing the foregut and combined midgut+hindgut parts for DNA extraction. This video is an MP4 file and can be viewed here with QuickTime or Windows Media Player, or can be viewed from the Botanical Society of America’s YouTube channel.
Fig. 1.PCR amplification of three fragments of the trnL gene (primers c-d, e-f, and g-h) and the ITS gene from four test plants (A) and from ingested plants within gut contents of four grasshopper individuals (B). Ci: Cichorium intybus; Ms: Miscanthus sinensis; Pl: Plantago lanceolata; Tr: Trifolium repens. Each group of four lanes for each plant species represents one plant individual. Gr1: Melanoplus differentialis, Gr2: nymph Melanoplus spp. grasshopper; Gr3-4: M. femurrubrum grasshoppers; M: molecular marker (1-kb DNA ladder). Each group of four lanes for each grasshopper species represents one individual. Primers c-d successfully amplified fragments of the chloroplast trnL (UAA) gene in several other test plants (C) and in ingested plants in gut contents of several nymph individuals of the Melanoplus spp. grasshoppers (D). Each lane represents a different plant individual of Poaceae, Asteraceae, Fabaceae, and Plantaginaceae families (C) and a different grasshopper individual (D).
The feeding experiments used in the study for plant DNA detection from grasshopper gut contents.
| Grasshopper species | Life stage | Weight (g), mean ± 1 SE | Type of feeding experiment | Plant species used for feeding | Total time of feeding | Tissues for DNA extraction |
| Nymph | 0.11 ± 0.02 | Choice | 3.5 h | Whole body | ||
| Adult | 1.66 ± 0.27 | Choice | 3.5 h | Foregut and combined midgut+hindgut separately | ||
| Adult | 0.36 ± 0.01 | Choice | Plant mixture | 2 d | Whole gut | |
| 0.35 ± 0.02 | No-choice | 3.5 h |
Plant DNA detectability in grasshopper gut contents across several time intervals post-ingestion in different grasshopper species. A single grasshopper was tested for each time point in all experiments.
| Grasshopper species | Life stage | Type of feeding experiment | Time intervals post-ingestion (h) | |||||||||
| 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 6 | 8 | 10 | 12 | 22 | |||
| Nymph | Choice | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | ||||
| Adult | Choice | + | + | + | + | |||||||
| Adult | Choice | + | + | + | + | + | — | — | ||||
| No-choice | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | |||||
Note: + = plant DNA was successfully amplified and sequenced; — = plant DNA was not detected.
Empty cells indicate the cases where data was not available for this specific time interval.
Fig. 2.PCR amplification of the trnL gene at different time intervals post-ingestion (PI) after feeding experiments with grasshoppers. The numbers correspond to hours post-ingestion (h PI). One grasshopper individual has been dissected at each time point. “-”: negative control (DNA from grasshopper’s leg muscle tissue); “+”: positive control (plants offered for feeding). Each lane (A–C) represents a different grasshopper individual. (A) No-choice feeding experiment with adult Melanoplus femurrubrum grasshoppers and Bothriochloa bladhii plants. The plant DNA was present in the grasshopper guts up to 12 h PI. (B) Choice feeding experiment with adult M. femurrubrum grasshoppers and a mixture of plants. The plant DNA was present in the grasshopper guts up to 8 h PI. (C) Choice feeding experiment with nymph Melanoplus spp. grasshoppers. The plant DNA was present in the grasshopper guts up to 12 h PI. (D) Choice feeding experiment with adult M. differentialis grasshoppers. Bb: Bothriochloa bladhii (positive control 1); Bc: Bouteloua curtipendula (positive control 2); Neg: negative control; fg: foregut; mhg: combined midgut+hindgut. Each of the two lanes (foregut and combined midgut+hindgut) at each time point represents the same grasshopper individual. The plant DNA was present in both foregut and combined midgut+hindgut parts up to 22 h PI.