| Literature DB >> 30285257 |
Ainatun Nadrah Zulkifli1, Hazlina Ahamad Zakeri2, Wahizatul Afzan Azmi1.
Abstract
The red palm weevil (RPW), Rhynchophorus ferrugineus Olivier (Coleoptera: Dryophthoridae) is one of the most dangerous pests of major cultivated palms including coconut, oil palm, and sago. The larval stage of the weevil causes the most destruction of the palms as it completely destroys the palm cabbage. In this study, the larvae were given three different diets-coconut cabbage, oil palm cabbage, and sago stem, under laboratory conditions for food consumption and developmental time experiment. The protein profiles of the digestive systems of the larvae fed on these three diets were also determined. Although the coconut diet was the most consumed by RPW larvae compared to oil palm and sago diets, the growth rate of RPW larvae on oil palm diet was however significantly shorter than those on the coconut and sago diets: the RPW only need 1 mo and 9 d to complete the larval duration. Proteins profiling of eight 2-DE gel protein spots that range 50-20 kDa were identified by mass spectrometry sequence analysis. Based on the Matrix Science Software, the most dominant protein was cationic trypsin. However, based on the NCBI BLAST tool, aminopeptidase N was the most dominant enzyme. This finding can lead to the development of pest control strategies based on the antinutritional protease inhibitors as potential biocontrol agents. Urgent action to find effective control methods should be taken seriously as this weevil is presumed to be one of the serious pests of oil palm industry in Malaysia.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30285257 PMCID: PMC6169988 DOI: 10.1093/jisesa/iey093
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Insect Sci ISSN: 1536-2442 Impact factor: 1.857
Fig. 1.
Comparison between different diets consumed by the RPW larvae. Means with different letters indicate significantly different (Tukey’s honest significant difference test, P < 0.05); N = 60.
Fig. 2.Food consumption by the larvae based on different instar levels. Means with different letters indicate significantly different (Tukey’s HSD, P < 0.05); N = 60.
Fig. 3.Two-DE gel of the protein content of the digestive system of RPW larvae reared on (A) coconut; (B) oil palm; and (C) sago diets. Spots circled and numbered are spots that are different among the diets, coconut (spots 1–3), oil palm (spots 4–6), and sago (spots 7–12).
List of all spots for protein identification from digestive system of RPW larvae reared on different diets as determined by LCMS/MS
| Spot number/ Diet | Accession number | Peptide sequence | Protein identified (using Matrix Science) | Score (%) | Protein identified (using NCBI BLAST tool) | Score (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Coconut | ||||||
| 1 | P00760 | 149- SS -150 | Enzyme: Cationic trypsin | 56 | Enzyme: Aminopeptidase N | 76 |
| 2 | G3QLP7 | 256- NMQDM VEDYR -265 | Protein: Uncharacterized protein | 90 | Protein: CAZy families GH58 protein | 90 |
| H9Z8R8 | i)73- ISISTSGG SFR -83 | Protein: Keratin type II cytoskeletal 5 | 64 | (shown too small score in protein identification) | ||
| 3 | P00760 | 149- SS -150 | Enzyme: Cationic trypsin | 70 | Protein: Bgal_small_N | 70 |
| Oil palm | ||||||
| 5 | P00760 | 149- SS -150 | Enzyme: Cationic trypsin | 57 | Enzyme: Aminopeptidase N | 76 |
| 6 | P00760 | 149- SS -150 | Enzyme: Cationic trypsin | 70 | Enzyme: Aminopeptidase N | 76 |
| Sago | P00760 | 149- SS -150 | Enzyme: Cationic trypsin | 62 | Enzyme: Aminopeptidase N | 76 |
| 10 | P00760 | 149- SS -150 | Enzyme: Cationic trypsin | 56 | Enzyme: Aminopeptidase N | 76 |
| 11 | P00760 | 149- SS -150 | Enzyme: Cationic trypsin | 69 | Enzyme: Aminopeptidase N | 76 |