| Literature DB >> 27672652 |
Xuejiao Liu1, Dousheng Wu1, Yongqiang Zhang1, Hong Zhou1, Ting Lai1, Wei Ding1.
Abstract
Tetranychus cinnabarinus is an important agricultural pest with a broad host range. We previously identified curcumin as a promising acaricidal compound against T. cinnabarinus. However, the acaricidal mechanism of curcumin remains unknown. In this study, RNA-seq was employed to analyze the transcriptome changes in T. cinnabarinus treated with curcumin or the solvent. A total of 105,706,297 clean sequence reads were generated by sequencing, with more than 90% of the reads successfully mapped to the reference sequence. The RNA-seq identified 111 and 96 differentially expressed genes between curcumin- and solvent-treated mites at 24 and 48 h after treatment, respectively. GO enrichment analysis of differentially expressed genes showed that the cellular process was the dominant group at both time points. Finally, we screened 23 differentially expressed genes that were functionally identical or similar to the targets of common insecticide/acaricides or genes that were associated with mite detoxification and metabolism. Calmodulin, phospholipase A2, and phospholipase C were activated upon curcumin treatment suggesting that the calcium channel related genes might play important roles in mite's response to curcumin. Overall our results revealed the global transcriptional changes in T. cinnabarinus after curcumin treatment to enable further identification of the targets of curcumin in mites.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27672652 PMCID: PMC5031819 DOI: 10.1155/2016/2796260
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Statistics of the reads generated from the RNA-Seq and their mapping against T. urticae genome.
| Samplea | Total reads | Total base pairs | Total mapped reads | Percentage of mapping |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CK 24 h-1 | 13 083 313 | 1 838 765 016 | 12 714 468 | 97.18% |
| CK 24 h-2 | 13 583 410 | 1 915 413 262 | 12 943 362 | 95.29% |
| CK 48 h-1 | 12 748 755 | 1 810 155 299 | 11 990 145 | 94.05% |
| CK 48 h-2 | 12 871 381 | 1 812 264 301 | 12 127 836 | 94.22% |
| Curcumin 24 h-1 | 13 031 623 | 1 847 855 454 | 12 652 036 | 97.09% |
| Curcumin 24 h-2 | 13 499 723 | 1 966 705 882 | 12 674 097 | 93.88% |
| Curcumin 48 h-1 | 13 297 084 | 1 758 353 497 | 12 559 389 | 94.45% |
| Curcumin 48 h-2 | 13 591 008 | 1 768 841 760 | 13 020 334 | 95.80% |
aTwo replicates for each treatment at each time point.
Figure 1Distribution of differentially expressed genes in T. cinnabarinus in response to curcumin. (a) Venn diagram showing the total number of differentially expressed genes at 24 h and 48 h posttreatment and the number of overlapped genes between two time points. (b) The number of upregulated and downregulated genes at 24 h and 48 h after curcumin treatment.
Figure 2Gene Ontology (GO) enrichment analysis of differentially expressed genes in T. cinnabarinus after curcumin or solvent treatment. (a) Functional categories of differentially expressed genes at 24 h posttreatment. (b) Functional categories of differentially expressed genes at 48 h posttreatment. Three main categories, biological process, cellular component, and molecular function, are summarized.
Figure 3KEGG pathway analysis of differentially expressed genes in T. cinnabarinus in response to curcumin. (a) Top 20 enriched KEGG pathways of differentially expressed genes at 24 h posttreatment. (b) Top 20 enriched KEGG pathways of differentially expressed genes at 48 h posttreatment. Rich factor is defined by the ratio of the number of differentially expressed genes enriched in the pathway and the number of all genes enriched in the same pathway.
Selected genes involved in mite detoxification and insecticide metabolism at 24 h posttreatment.
| Gene ID | Description | RPKM | Log2 fold change | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CK | Curcumin | |||
| tetur19g01690 | ABC transporter | 11.1858 | 2.50684 | −2.16 |
| tetur10g02970 | Topoisomerase | 15.93595 | 5.19572 | −1.62 |
| tetur25g00970 | Hyperpolarization-activated ion channel | 18.6278 | 7.948185 | −1.23 |
| tetur04g07610 | RabGAP/TBC | 15.34715 | 6.826305 | −1.17 |
| tetur10g04980 | Ser/Thr protein kinase | 62.09965 | 27.79795 | −1.16 |
| tetur05g08080 | Similar to gamma-aminobutyric acid | 15.4435 | 39.44995 | 1.35 |
| tetur09g03650 | Cystatin | 308.967 | 845.5195 | 1.45 |
| tetur39g00730 | Vitellogenin 1 | 1.80895 | 7.934175 | 2.13 |
| tetur23g01300 | Glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase | 3.69663 | 17.1982 | 2.22 |
| tetur08g03710 | Ras GTPase | 1.07431 | 7.073055 | 2.72 |
| tetur05g07400 | Phospholipase A2 | 0.253237 | 4.52485 | 4.16 |
| tetur453g00010 | Neuromedin-K receptor | 0.01 | 4.774815 | 8.90 |
| tetur02g05380 | Scaffold protein | 0.01 | 5.95338 | 9.22 |
Selected genes involved in mite signal transmission and insecticide metabolism at 48 h posttreatment.
| Gene ID | Description | RPKM | Log2 fold change | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CK | Curcumin | |||
| tetur08g03710 | Ras GTPase | 6.75555 | 0.01 | −9.40 |
| tetur07g05920 | Guanylate kinase | 71.2255 | 2.55663 | −4.80 |
| tetur39g00730 | Vitellogenin 1 | 17.40335 | 2.688785 | −2.69 |
| tetur22g02010 | SIFa: neuropeptide precursor | 15.8693 | 2.6419165 | −2.59 |
| tetur05g08080 | Similar to gamma-aminobutyric acid | 23.43175 | 5.391865 | −2.12 |
| tetur28g01480 | Stress-associated reticulum protein 1 | 402.0815 | 183.792 | −1.13 |
| tetur611g00020 | Calnexin | 17.2701 | 39.63885 | 1.20 |
| tetur05g03410 | Phospholipase C family member | 6.61663 | 18.364 | 1.47 |
| tetur09g03650 | Cystatin | 172.78 | 610.0945 | 1.82 |
| tetur14g03800 | Similar to PMP1 protein | 1.9205 | 10.75305 | 2.49 |
| tetur04g01900 | Calmodulin | 0.0771045 | 9.01032 | 6.87 |
| tetur01g05810 | Exostosin-1 | 0.01 | 39.373 | 11.94 |
| tetur04g07080 |
| 0.01 | 141.539 | 13.79 |
Figure 4qRT-PCR validation of some differentially expressed genes in RNA-Seq. The relative expression levels of fifteen differentially expressed genes in curcumin- or solvent-treated T. cinnabarinus were determined by qRT-PCR. RPS18 was used as the reference gene to normalize the gene expression using the ΔΔCq method. The y-axis indicates the log2 fold change of each gene in qRT-PCR (black) and RNA-Seq (white).