| Literature DB >> 34749730 |
Nicolas Parisot1, Carlos Vargas-Chávez1,2,3, Clément Goubert4,5,6, Patrice Baa-Puyoulet1, Séverine Balmand1, Louis Beranger1, Caroline Blanc1, Aymeric Bonnamour1, Matthieu Boulesteix4, Nelly Burlet4, Federica Calevro1, Patrick Callaerts7, Théo Chancy1, Hubert Charles1,8, Stefano Colella1,9, André Da Silva Barbosa10, Elisa Dell'Aglio1, Alex Di Genova4,8,11, Gérard Febvay1, Toni Gabaldón12,13,14, Mariana Galvão Ferrarini1, Alexandra Gerber15, Benjamin Gillet16, Robert Hubley17, Sandrine Hughes16, Emmanuelle Jacquin-Joly10, Justin Maire1,18, Marina Marcet-Houben12, Florent Masson1,19, Camille Meslin10, Nicolas Montagné10, Andrés Moya2,20, Ana Tereza Ribeiro de Vasconcelos15, Gautier Richard21, Jeb Rosen17, Marie-France Sagot4,8, Arian F A Smit17, Jessica M Storer17, Carole Vincent-Monegat1, Agnès Vallier1, Aurélien Vigneron1,22, Anna Zaidman-Rémy1, Waël Zamoum1, Cristina Vieira23,24, Rita Rebollo25, Amparo Latorre26,27, Abdelaziz Heddi28.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The rice weevil Sitophilus oryzae is one of the most important agricultural pests, causing extensive damage to cereal in fields and to stored grains. S. oryzae has an intracellular symbiotic relationship (endosymbiosis) with the Gram-negative bacterium Sodalis pierantonius and is a valuable model to decipher host-symbiont molecular interactions.Entities:
Keywords: Coleoptera; Endosymbiosis; Evolution; Genome; Immunity; Sitophilus oryzae; Transposable elements; Weevil
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Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34749730 PMCID: PMC8576890 DOI: 10.1186/s12915-021-01158-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Biol ISSN: 1741-7007 Impact factor: 7.431
Fig. 1.Sitophilus oryzae overview. A Life cycle of cereal weevil Sitophilus oryzae. The embryo develops into a larva and pupa, and metamorphoses into a young adult, exiting the grain around 3 days after metamorphosis completion. The developmental times indicated are from a rearing condition at 27 °C and 70% relative humidity. B Photos of adult S. oryzae. Lower panel shows an adult exiting the grain
Assembly statistics of S. oryzae’s genome in comparison to Curculionidae genomes and T. castaneum [6, 7, 51–57]
*All genes, no NCBI RefSeq annotation report available
Fig. 2.A Proportion of repeat content in S. oryzae’s genome. The majority of repeats detected in S. oryzae are represented by Class II (TIR) elements, LINEs (Class I), and unclassified repeats (unknown). NR: non repetitive. B Variation of genome size and TE content in 62 insect species from [40] and S. oryzae. Coleopteran species are depicted in dark blue, and S. oryzae in light blue. S. oryzae is clearly a TE-rich genome. C TE proportion across 11 insect species, including six coleoptera. In agreement with the data used for comparison [40], PLEs are included in the LINE superfamilies, DIRS in LTRs, and RC, CRY, MAV and TIR in the DNA superfamilies. NR: non repetitive. S. oryzae harbors the largest TE content among Coleopterans and most insect species studied to date. Within Coleoptera, there is a large variation in TE content and type, with A. planipennis, L. decemlineata, and O. taurus carrying an abundant LINE content, while S. oryzae, T. castaneum, and A. glabripennis show larger DNA content. Cladogram based on [246]. D Classification of the 570 Mbs of TEs present in the S. oryzae genome. Most TIR families detected were not classified into known superfamilies. RTE LINE and Gypsy LTR elements are the most abundant superfamilies among retrotransposons. Around 21% of repeats in S. oryzae’s genome were not classified by our pipeline, and remain unknown (gray). E Distribution of TIR length sequences (right) detected by einverted and the internal region present between both TIRs (left) for complete consensus of TIR superfamilies (color) and unknown TIR families (gray)
Fig. 3.TE distribution in S. oryzae’s genome. A Density of TE copies within gene regions. TE copies are the least abundant within TSSs, 5′ and 3′ UTRs and exons, while introns and intergenic regions are riddled with TEs. TSS: transcription start site, UTR: untranslated regions. B Relationship between intron length and TE per intron in D. melanogaster (red), H. sapiens (blue), and S. oryzae (yellow). S. oryzae shares characteristics of both Drosophila with short and TE-poor introns and Humans with a significant number of large, TE-packed introns
Fig. 4.A TE divergence landscape. Distribution of the divergence (Kimura two parameters, K2P) between TE copies and their consensus, aggregated by TE class reported in percent of the genome. The less divergent superfamilies are distributed to the left and suggest recent activity. Strikingly, most of the TE copies have less than 10% divergence to their consensus, with a large number of copies under 5% (dotted line). The distribution of the “unknown” class overlaps with the leftmost mode of the TIR distribution, suggesting that many more TIR families are yet to be described in S. oryzae. Strikingly, LTR elements are the least diverged altogether with the mode of the distribution on the 0–1% divergence bin. B Mean K2P distributions within TE superfamilies. Left panel depicts Class II families, and all Class I (retrotransposons) and unknown families are on the right panel. LTR superfamilies harbor some of the least divergent TE families, suggesting that this class may host some of the youngest TE
Fig. 5.TE family expression in midguts and ovaries from S. oryzae. A Log10 normalized counts in midguts and ovaries triplicates. Normalized counts show different proportions of transcriptionally active TE families in different TE classes. B Log10 of base mean average expression of TE families in ovaries and midguts from three biological replicates. Depicted in color only TE families which had differential expression between ovary and gut tissues (padj< 0.05, |log2FC| > 2). Most TE families are upregulated in midguts compared to ovaries. C Distribution of all significant (padj< 0.05). Log2FC depicts specifically deregulated TE classes in each tissue. LTR elements are predominantly upregulated in ovaries
Fig. 6.TE landscape across Sitophilus species. A Proportion of TE per species estimated from short reads with dnaPipeTE and a custom TE library including Repbase (release 2017) and annotated TE consensus discovered in S. oryzae. S. oryzae, S. zeamais, and S. granarius harbor similar TE content, while S. granarius presents a smaller TE load, and S. linearis harbors the smallest TE content and the higher proportion of unknown repeats. The proportion of unknown repeats only found by dnaPipeTE (black) increases from S. oryzae to S. linearis with the phylogenetic distance. B Distribution of divergence values between raw reads and repeats contig assembled with dnaPipeTE (blastn) across four Sitophilus species. S. oryzae appears to share its TE landscape with S. zeamais and S. granarius, but the three species display a distinct repeatome than S. linearis, in spite of their phylogenetic proximity. SO2: S. oryzae’s TE library produced in this analysis, DPTE: DNApipeTE TE annotation (repeats only found by dnaPipeTE)
Fig. 7.Differentially expressed TE families between symbiotic and aposymbiotic S. oryzae ovaries. Log10 of base mean average expression of TE families in symbiotic vs aposymbiotic ovaries from two biological replicates. Depicted in color only TE families which had differential expression between both ovary types (padj< 0.05, |log2FC| > 2). Two LTR elements and one LINE element are upregulated (log2FC > 2) in symbiotic ovaries