Evolution, expression and association of the chemosensory protein genes with the outbreak phase of the two main pest locusts
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Springer Nature
Date
2017-07-27Referencia bibliográfica
Martín-Blázquez, R., Chen, B., Kang, L. et al. Evolution, expression and association of the chemosensory protein genes with the outbreak phase of the two main pest locusts. Sci Rep 7, 6653 (2017). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-07068-0
Sponsorship
Spanish Ministerio de Ciencia y Tecnología and Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación for the BFU2010-16438 grant; Ramón y Cajal fellowship; FPI studentshipAbstract
We analyze the evolutionary relationships and expression patterns of the large set of genes for
chemosensory proteins (CSPs) in the two main pest locusts. We used the available transcriptome and
genome data to infer the number of genes using BLAST searches and sequence similarity matrices.
Maximum likelihood phylogenies revealed the relationships between these CSPs and CSPs from several
arthropods. RNAseq and qPCR allowed associating CSPs to locust phases. Crossing the phylogenetic
and expression data allowed us to deduce homologies and conservation of the involvement in the
phase change. We confirm that Locusta migratoria has at least 58 CSP gene copies, only five of which
lack evidence of expression, and we reveal that Schistocerca gregaria has at least 42 expressed CSP
genes. Both species share 21 orthologs, whereas 33 L. migratoria and 15 S. gregaria CSPs seem
species-specific. Additional six S. gregaria and four L. migratoria CSPs seem duplications. Although the
expression profiles are not especially conserved, seven orthologous CSP pairs share a gregarious overexpression
pattern in adult locusts. We thus confirm that the number of locusts’ CSPs is large, due to
gene duplications during the evolution of Orthoptera, we establish sequence and potential functional
homologies, and we highlight specific CSPs that appear to be involved in locust gregariousness either in
general or in a species-specific manner.