Sexual dimorphism and sex-biased gene expression in an egg parasitoid species, Anastatus disparis

Abstract Background Differences in the expression of genes present in both sexes are assumed to contribute to sex differences including behavioural, physiological and morphological dimorphisms. For enriching our knowledge of gender differences in an important egg parasitoid wasp, Anastatus disparis...

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Main Authors: Peng-Cheng Liu, De-Jun Hao, Hao-Yuan Hu, Jian-Rong Wei
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-07-01
Series:BMC Genomics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12864-020-06903-5
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author Peng-Cheng Liu
De-Jun Hao
Hao-Yuan Hu
Jian-Rong Wei
author_facet Peng-Cheng Liu
De-Jun Hao
Hao-Yuan Hu
Jian-Rong Wei
author_sort Peng-Cheng Liu
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Background Differences in the expression of genes present in both sexes are assumed to contribute to sex differences including behavioural, physiological and morphological dimorphisms. For enriching our knowledge of gender differences in an important egg parasitoid wasp, Anastatus disparis (Hymenoptera: Eupelmidae), sex-biased differences in gene expression were investigated using Illumina-based transcriptomic analysis. Results A total of 15,812 resulting unigenes were annotated, and a large set of genes accounting for 50.09% of the total showed sex-biased expression and included 630 sex-specific genes. Gene Ontology (GO) enrichment analyses showed that the functional categories associated with sex-biased genes were mainly related to reproduction. In addition, the transcriptome data provided evidence that sex pheromones in A. disparis are produced by the female, and activity of Δ12-desaturases appear to have been replaced by Δ9-desaturases playing roles in sex pheromone production. The large set of sex-biased genes identified in this study provide a molecular background for sexually dimorphic traits such as flyability, longevity, and aggression in this species and suggests candidate venom proteins expressed only in females that could be used for biological control. Conclusions This study provides comprehensive insight into sexually dimorphic traits of a parasitoid wasp and can inform future research into the molecular mechanisms underlying such traits and the application of parasitoids to the biological control of pest species.
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spelling doaj.art-0ee4d1f04d1048ce89b81593d4f2baf62022-12-22T02:34:14ZengBMCBMC Genomics1471-21642020-07-0121111110.1186/s12864-020-06903-5Sexual dimorphism and sex-biased gene expression in an egg parasitoid species, Anastatus disparisPeng-Cheng Liu0De-Jun Hao1Hao-Yuan Hu2Jian-Rong Wei3The College of Ecology and Environment, Anhui Normal UniversityThe College of Forestry, Nanjing Forestry UniversityThe College of Ecology and Environment, Anhui Normal UniversityThe College of Life Science, Hebei UniversityAbstract Background Differences in the expression of genes present in both sexes are assumed to contribute to sex differences including behavioural, physiological and morphological dimorphisms. For enriching our knowledge of gender differences in an important egg parasitoid wasp, Anastatus disparis (Hymenoptera: Eupelmidae), sex-biased differences in gene expression were investigated using Illumina-based transcriptomic analysis. Results A total of 15,812 resulting unigenes were annotated, and a large set of genes accounting for 50.09% of the total showed sex-biased expression and included 630 sex-specific genes. Gene Ontology (GO) enrichment analyses showed that the functional categories associated with sex-biased genes were mainly related to reproduction. In addition, the transcriptome data provided evidence that sex pheromones in A. disparis are produced by the female, and activity of Δ12-desaturases appear to have been replaced by Δ9-desaturases playing roles in sex pheromone production. The large set of sex-biased genes identified in this study provide a molecular background for sexually dimorphic traits such as flyability, longevity, and aggression in this species and suggests candidate venom proteins expressed only in females that could be used for biological control. Conclusions This study provides comprehensive insight into sexually dimorphic traits of a parasitoid wasp and can inform future research into the molecular mechanisms underlying such traits and the application of parasitoids to the biological control of pest species.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12864-020-06903-5Transcriptomic analysisSex-specific genesFlyabilityLongevityAggressionVenom protein
spellingShingle Peng-Cheng Liu
De-Jun Hao
Hao-Yuan Hu
Jian-Rong Wei
Sexual dimorphism and sex-biased gene expression in an egg parasitoid species, Anastatus disparis
BMC Genomics
Transcriptomic analysis
Sex-specific genes
Flyability
Longevity
Aggression
Venom protein
title Sexual dimorphism and sex-biased gene expression in an egg parasitoid species, Anastatus disparis
title_full Sexual dimorphism and sex-biased gene expression in an egg parasitoid species, Anastatus disparis
title_fullStr Sexual dimorphism and sex-biased gene expression in an egg parasitoid species, Anastatus disparis
title_full_unstemmed Sexual dimorphism and sex-biased gene expression in an egg parasitoid species, Anastatus disparis
title_short Sexual dimorphism and sex-biased gene expression in an egg parasitoid species, Anastatus disparis
title_sort sexual dimorphism and sex biased gene expression in an egg parasitoid species anastatus disparis
topic Transcriptomic analysis
Sex-specific genes
Flyability
Longevity
Aggression
Venom protein
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12864-020-06903-5
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