| Literature DB >> 27775569 |
Jin Xu1,2, Xia-Fei Wang3, Peng Chen4, Fang-Tao Liu5, Shuai-Chao Zheng6, Hui Ye7, Ming-He Mo8.
Abstract
The vast majority of lepidopterans, about 90%, are moths. Some moths, particularly their caterpillars, are major agricultural and forestry pests in many parts of the world. However, some other members of moths, such as the silkworm Bombyx mori, are famous for their economic value. Fire et al. in 1998 initially found that exogenous double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) can silence the homolog endogenous mRNA in organisms, which is called RNA interference (RNAi). Soon after, the RNAi technique proved to be very promising not only in gene function determination but also in pest control. However, later studies demonstrate that performing RNAi in moths is not as straightforward as shown in other insect taxa. Nevertheless, since 2007, especially after 2010, an increasing number of reports have been published that describe successful RNAi experiments in different moth species either on gene function analysis or on pest management exploration. So far, more than 100 peer-reviewed papers have reported successful RNAi experiments in moths, covering 10 families and 25 species. By using classic and novel dsRNA delivery methods, these studies effectively silence the expression of various target genes and determine their function in larval development, reproduction, immunology, resistance against chemicals, and other biological processes. In addition, a number of laboratory and field trials have demonstrated that RNAi is also a potential strategy for moth pest management. In this review, therefore, we summarize and discuss the mechanisms and applications of the RNAi technique in moths by focusing on recent progresses.Entities:
Keywords: RNAi; dsRNA; gene function; moths; pest control
Year: 2016 PMID: 27775569 PMCID: PMC5083927 DOI: 10.3390/genes7100088
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genes (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4425 Impact factor: 4.096
Overview on use of RNA interference (RNAi) techniques for gene function analysis in moths.
| Family and Species | Target Genes | Life Stage | Methods | dsRNA Dosage, Frequency | Silencing Duration | mRNA Silencing | Effects | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bombycidae | Pupae | Injection | 10 μg per pupa | 24 h | 99% | Significantly reduced the expression of | [ | |
| Bombycidae | Cells | Incubation | 1 μg/1.5 mL media, 8 h | 48 h | - | The expression of | [ | |
| Bombycidae | cuticle protein gene | 2nd instar larvae | Incubation | 2 μg per insect, single | 72 h | 90% | Molting time in the 2nd instar delayed | [ |
| Bombycidae | 3–5 h old eggs | Injection | 2–3 nL of 100 μM solution per egg, single | - | - | Eggs failed to turn into the normal purplish-brown color, but became white. | [ | |
| Bombycidae | 3–5 h old eggs | Electroporation | 0.25–0.5 μL of 100 μM solution | - | - | Compound eyes failed to turn into the normal dark, but became reddish. | [ | |
| Bombycidae | - | Transgenic | - | - | 85% | Lethal ecdysis deficiency in 2nd instar larvae. | [ | |
| Crambidae | 3rd instar larvae | Feeding | 250 ng per larva, single | 24 h | 37% ( | Aminopeptidase N activity reduced 37.1% for N1, 31.2% for N2, and 11.6% for N3. Susceptibility to Cry1Ab toxin significantly decreased. | [ | |
| Crambidae | chitinase gene | Neonate larvae | Feeding | 4 mg artificial diet containing 10 mg of dsRNA, 1 day for 4 days | 8 days | 64% | Chitin content increased 26% in the peritrophic matrix, body weight decreased 54%. | [ |
| Gelechiidae | 3rd instar larvae | Injection | 0.2 μg per larva, single | 10 days | - | Shrinkage of the bodies and slower development, mortality increased 34.0%. | [ | |
| Lymantriidae | 3rd instar larvae | Injection | 1 μg per larva, single | - | - | Larval mortality increased 30%. | [ | |
| Noctuidae | 1 day old male moth | Injection | 1 μg per moth, single | 4 days | - | Behavioral response to sex pheromone was reduced. | [ | |
| Noctuidae | 3rd instar larvae | Injection | (4 μg USP + 4 μg EcR)/1 insect, single | - | - | Larvae mortality increased 11.7%, pupation rate decreased 43%. | [ | |
| Noctuidae | Neonate larvae | Feeding | 1 μg/μL solution, single | - | - | Pupation rate decreased 8.8%. | [ | |
| Noctuidae | Neonate larvae | Feeding | 1 μg/10 mg diet, 1 day | - | 40.3% | Pupation rate decreased 40.4%. | [ | |
| Noctuidae | Neonate larvae | Bacteria mediated | 100 μL bacteria expressing dsRNA, 1 day | - | - | Larvae mortality increased 34.1%, pupation rate decreased 68.7%. | [ | |
| Noctuidae | 4–5 days old pupae | Injection | 3 μg per pupa, single | - | Significantly reduced | Gland pheromone titre decreased 78%. | [ | |
| Noctuidae | 5th, 6th instar larvae | Injection, bacteria or baculovirus mediated | - | - | Significantly reduced | Abnormalities in the posterior side of larval-pupal intermediates. | [ | |
| Noctuidae | 5th instar larvae | Injection | 400 ng per larva, single | 48 h | Significantly reduced | Susceptibility to BtA decreased 39%. | [ | |
| Noctuidae | 4th-instar larvae | Feeding | 3 μg solution, single | 48 h | - | Growth inhibition by Bt reduced 30%. | [ | |
| Noctuidae | Newly eclosed moth | Injection | 1.5 μg per moth, single | 2 days | 80% in brain, 60% in ovary | Males transferred significant more JH I and JH II to females during mating. | [ | |
| Noctuidae | an immune gene | 4th instar larvae | Oral administration | 450 ng per larva, 12 h | 3 days | 95% | Encapsulation index of hemocytes reduced 90%. | [ |
| Noctuidae | Cells | Incubation | 100 nM | 48 h | 94.3% | ROS increased 675%, apoptosis increased 26.3 fold, cell cycle arrest. | [ | |
| Noctuidae | 4th-instar larvae | Injection | 5 μg per larva | 7 days | 25.34% | Larvae mortality decreased 21.0%. | [ | |
| Noctuidae | Pupae | Injection | 0.4 μg per pupa | - | - | Male moths response to the sex pheromone reduced by 26%. | [ | |
| Noctuidae | 0–6 h old moths | Injection | 10 μg per moth, single | 2 days | 69.6% in head, 87.1% in bursa copulatrix | Fail to respond to male accessary gland factors and continue to show virgin behaviors. | [ | |
| Noctuidae | 0–6 h old moths | Injection | 10 μg per moth, single | 30 h | 60% | Gland pheromone (4 components) titres decreased 12%–31%. | [ | |
| Pieridae | 1 day old pupae | Injection | 20 μg per pupa, single | 12 h | 50% in hemocytes | The ability of hemocytes to encapsulate beads reduced 30%. | [ | |
| Plutellidae | cytochrome P450 | 3rd-instar larvae | Injection | 0.3 μg per larva, single | 12 h | 83% | Mortality of the injected abamectin-resistant larvae increased 22%–32%. | [ |
| Plutellidae | 4th-instar larvae | Feeding | 1 μg/cm2 leaf, 12 h | 72 h | 64.04% | - | [ | |
| Plutellidae | 3rd-instar larvae | Injection | 30 ng per larvae | 30 h | 82% | Hemocyte-spreading reduced 64%. | [ | |
| Plutellidae | 3rd-instar larvae | Injection | 0.14 μg per insect, single | - | Significantly reduced | Offspring’s hatching decreased 14.5%–17.8% and eclosion decreased 6.3%–17.5%. | [ | |
| Pyralidae | 5th instar larvae | Injection | 0.25 μg per larva, single | 72 h | 100% | Increased the bacterial pathogenicity by 40%, enhanced the insecticidal activity of ClO2 gas by 23%. | [ | |
| Pyralidae | 1–3 h old eggs | Injection | 0.1 ng per egg, single | - | Significantly reduced | Larvae loss of eye-color pigmentation. | [ | |
| Pyralidae | 1 h old moth | Injection | 1 μg per moth, single | 3 days | 55% | Short ovarioles, unorganized egg sizes, and few fully developed eggs. | [ | |
| Saturniidae | 5th instar larvae | Injection | 70 μg per larva, single | 6 days | Significantly reduced in females | Female gonads deformed and shrunken. | [ | |
| Saturniidae | Pupae | Injection | 1 μg per pupa, single | 72 h | 80% | Early diapause termination. | [ | |
| Saturniidae | Pupae | Injection | 1 μg per pupa | 24 h | - | Phenoloxidase activity reduced 55%. | [ | |
| Sphingidae | 5th instar larvae | Injection | 100 ng per larva, single | 18 h | - | The number of bacteria within the cells reduced 55%. | [ | |
| Tortricidae | 3rd instar larvae | Feeding | 1 μg per insect, single | 7 days | 80% | - | [ |
Overview on RNAi mediated moth pests control explorations.
| Target Pests | Target Genes | Host Plants | Application Methods | Silencing Duration | mRNA Silencing | Control Efficacy | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| - | 50 ng/mL dsRNA directly sprayed on the larvae | 5 days | - | Larval mortality increased 36%–48%. | [ | ||
| - | 50 ng/mL dsRNA directly sprayed on the larvae along with artificial diet | 5 days | - | Larval mortality increased 70%–78%. | [ | ||
| 8 different genes | - | 4th instar larvae, injection 4 μg per larva | 120 h | - | Larval mortality increased 5%–28% | [ | |
| - | Neonate larvae, feed on 250 ng/μL solution | 8 days | 50% | Larval length reduced 17%. | [ | ||
| acetylcholine esterase | - | siRNAs were fed continuously from the neonatal stage to the pre-pupation stage | - | - | Mortality increased by 15%, growth inhibition of larvae, reduction in the pupal weight, malformation and drastically reduced fecundity (reduced 58%–100%, depends on different dsRNA concentrations). | [ | |
| cabbage | 2nd instar larvae feed on dsRNA-treated cabbage for 12 h, each cabbage (700 mm2) had been overlaid with 1200 ng of dsRNA | 5 days | Significantly reduced | Larval mortality increased 77%. | [ | ||
| cabbage | 3 μg per cm2 cabbage leaf | 72 h | 99% | Larval mortality increased 53%. | [ | ||
| Acetylcholine esterase | Spray | 5 days | - | Larval mortality increased 53.4%. | [ | ||
| acetylcholine esterase | cabbage | 2nd instar larvae feed on cabbage leaves coated 3 mg siRNA/cm2 leaf | 72 h | - | Larval mortality increased 65%. | [ | |
| rice | 3 d old larvae feed no rice stem contained dsRNA by 30 μL of 30 pM dsRNA/8 cm stem | 12 days | Reduced 3.5 fold | Larval weight reduced 47%, | [ | ||
| - | 25 mg diet that was coated with 25 mL of 0–0.5 mg/mL dsRNA | 7 days | - | Larval mortality increased 48%. | [ | ||
| - | 1st-instar larvae feed on bacteria expressing dsRNA | 2–12 days | 60%–80% | Mortality increased 2%–11%. | [ | ||
| cytochrome P450 | - | Larvae feed on bacteria expressing dsRNA | 72 h | 88% | Mortality increased 27%. | [ | |
| - | 1st-instar larvae feed on bacterial culture containing bacteria expressing dsRNA | - | - | Larval mortality increased 14% and 21% in 4th and 5th larval instars, 26% and 18% in prepupae and pupae. | [ | ||
| cytochrome P450 | Transgenic plants expressing dsRNA | - | - | Larval growth is retarded, the effects are more dramatic in the presence of gossypol. | [ | ||
| cytochrome P450 | Transgenic plants expressing dsRNA | 4–10 days | - | Larval growth decreased 61%, rate of leaf consumption reduced 39%. | [ | ||
| Tobacco | Transgenic plants expressing dsRNA | 6–16 days | - | Mortality increased 0%–33% for different RNAi tobacco lines. | [ | ||
| Tomato | Transgenic plants expressing dsRNA | 6–16 days | - | Mortality increased 2%–45% for different RNAi tomato lines. | [ |