4.4 Article

Identification and expression patterns of candidate carboxylesterases in Carposina sasakii Matsumura (Lepidoptera: Carposinidae) an important pest of fruit trees

Journal

BULLETIN OF ENTOMOLOGICAL RESEARCH
Volume 112, Issue 4, Pages 567-573

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S0007485322000244

Keywords

Carboxylesterase; expression pattern; Carposina sasakii; transcriptomic data

Categories

Funding

  1. Research Start-up Foundation for Introduced Talents of Shenyang Agricultural University [20153016]
  2. Research Start-up Foundation for Doctors of Liaoning Province [20170520379]

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In this study, four candidate carboxylesterases (CXEs) were identified in Carposina sasakii using transcriptomic data analysis. The conserved amino acid residues and gene expression patterns of these CXEs were analyzed. The study laid the foundation for further exploring the functions of CXEs in C. sasakii.
Carposina sasakii Matsumura (Lepidoptera: Carposinidae) is an important pest of fruit trees in a large area of Asia. The adults mainly depend on olfaction to communicate with the environment, but the olfactory mechanism has not been well known. Odorant degrading enzymes (ODEs) are important olfactory proteins, which inactivate and degrade odorants to free odorant receptors for maintaining olfactory sensitivity. Carboxylesterases (CXEs) are considered to be a major group of moth ODEs. In this study, four candidate CXEs (CsasCXE1 similar to CsasCXE4) were identified by using head transcriptomic data from C. sasakii adult females and males. Sequence alignment showed conserved amino acid residues and their variations in C. sasakii CXEs. Phylogenetic analysis indicated the CXEs with the variations cluster well, and each C. sasakii CXE clusters in a Glade with some of the other lepidopteran CXEs, with a high enough bootstrap value. Gene expression analysis revealed that CsasCXE2 and CsasCXE3 have similar tissue and sex expression patterns in C. sasakii adults. The two CXEs have relatively high expression levels in the heads and are expressed more abundantly in the female heads than male heads. CsasCXE1 and CsasCXE4 are expressed at higher levels in the male heads than female heads, but not dominantly expressed in the heads among the different tissues. Whether these CXEs function as ODEs remains to be further researched. This study laid the foundation for exploring functions of C. sasakii CXEs.

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