Abstract
Cytochrome P450 superfamily proteins play important roles in detoxification of xenobiotics and during physiological and developmental processes. To contribute to our understanding of this large gene family in insects, we have investigated the function of the cytochrome P450 gene LmCYP4G102 in the migratory locust Locusta migratoria. Suppression of LmCYP4G102 expression by RNA interference (RNAi) does not interfere with moulting but causes rapid loss of body weight - probably due to massive loss of water, and death soon after moulting. Accordingly, maintaining these animals at 90% relative humidity prevented lethality. Consistently, RNAi against LmCYP4G102 provoked a decrease in the content of cuticular alkanes, which as an important fraction of cuticular hydrocarbons have been shown to confer desiccation resistance. In addition, the cuticle of LmCYP4G102-knockdown locusts was fragile and easier deformable than in control animals. Presumably, this phenotype is due to decreased amounts of cuticular water that is reported to modulate cuticle mechanics. Interestingly, LmCYP4G102 was not expressed in the epidermis that produces the cuticle but in the sub-epdiermal hepatocyte-like oenocytes. Together, our results suggest that the oenocyte-specific LmCYP4G102 plays a critical role in the synthesis of cuticular hydrocarbons, which are important for cuticle waterproofing and mechanical stability in L. migratoria
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Introduction
Cytochrome P450 monooxygenases (P450s or CYPs) belong to an ancient gene superfamily that is highly conserved in all organisms. These enzymes play an essential role in oxidation reactions in many important life processes1. CYP genes are abundant in insects; they generally participate in the metabolisms of plant secondary substances and pesticides and are also involved in insect growth and development by synthesizing endogenous substances, such as ecdysone, juvenile hormone (JH), fatty acids and cuticular hydrocarbons2,3,4,5.
Cytochrome P450 genes are expressed in a tissue-specific manner, indicating their diverse physiological functions2. Many CYPs that have been studied, especially in agricultural pest insects, were found to be involved in detoxification of insecticides. Among them, CYPs belonging to the CYP4, CYP6, CYP9 and CYP12 families are generally expressed in the midgut, Malpighian tubules and fat bodies6,7,8. CYPs expressed in the prothoracic glands are involved in hormone 20-hydroxyecdysone (20E) biosynthesis in Drosophila melanogaster and Manduca sexta2,9,10,11. However, CYP15A1 is expressed selectively in the corpora allata of Diploptera punctata, which catalyses an epoxidation reaction in the JH biosynthesis pathway4. CYP4G20 is expressed in the olfactory sensilla of Mamestra brassicae, suggesting its role in odorant and/or xenobiotic clearance12. Martins’ group previously investigated the transcriptome of oenocytes isolated from Aedes aegypti pupae and found that 8% of the oenocyte transcripts were coding cytochrome P450s13.
Oenocytes are derived from the ectoderm and are often large, polyploid cells. The location of oenocytes varies in different insect species. In Drosophila, oenocytes form subepidermal clusters located on both sides of each abdominal segment14; in Apis mellifera, oenocytes are present in groups below the epidermis in close association with the fat bodies15,16; and in Tenebrio molitor, oenocytes lie among the fat bodies and are tightly associated with the tracheal system17.
Although oenocytes were discovered more than 150 years ago, their function is still not completely understood. Several studies have indicated that insect oenocytes participate in detoxification processes and lipid metabolism14,18. In addition, CYPs expressed in oenocytes might participate in steroid metabolism19. However, the association between CYPs and ecdysone synthesis in oenocytes remains to be elucidated. Thus far, the only cytochrome P450 enzyme that has been detected in Drosophila oenocytes is CYP4G1, an oxidative decarbonylase for cuticular hydrocarbon biosynthesis5. Consistently, the role of oenocytes in the production of cuticular hydrocarbons has also been demonstrated in the German cockroach, Blattella germanica20.
The multiple functions of the CYP enzymes in insects are widely recognized, but there is limited knowledge on their physiological roles in oenocytes. In the present work, we identified an oenocyte-specific cytochrome P450 gene (LmCYP4G102) from L. migratoria. Suppression of LmCYP4G102 expression by RNA interference (RNAi) led to rapid weight loss and dehydration-induced mortality. Consistently, the amounts of cuticular hydrocarbons (CHCs) that have been reported to constitute a waterproof barrier in insects21,22,23 were significantly reduced in dsLmCYP4G102-injected insects. In addition, their cuticle had lost resistance to mechanical stress. We believe, however, that this function of LmCYP4G102 is indirect. Rather, consistent with the theory that water is a major modulator of cuticle stiffness24, massive water loss provoked by LmCYP4G102 RNAi results in a dry and brittle cuticle.
Results
Molecular characterization of LmCYP4G102
The predicted protein of LmCYP4G102 from L. migratoria (GenBank accession number: KU833274) contains 561 amino acid residues and has a calculated molecular mass of 63.7 kDa. The deduced amino acid sequence has a heme-binding motif (FXXGXRXCXG/A) near the C-terminus, containing amino acid residues 491–500 and a cysteine residue, which is important for heme binding. The consensus sequence WXXXR is the structural element of Helix-C (heme-interacting region). A characteristic Asp/Glu-rich insertion of 34-residue sequence is unique to CYP4G P450s5. The conserved 13-residue motif EVDTIMFEGHDTT is a characteristic of the CYP family 4 and is not shared by other CYPs25. Furthermore, Helix-K (hydrogen-binding sequence) is shared among CYP genes with the consensus sequence EXXR. PXXFXPE/DRF is in the “meander” facing the EXLR motif. (Fig. 1A). Amino acid sequence alignments showed that LmCYP4G102 possessed characteristic motif sequences of CYP4Gs. The availability of a genomic sequence in the whole-genome shotgun sequencing project of L. migratoria allowed the determination of the exon/intron organization of LmCYP4G102, which includes 11 introns and 12 exons (Fig. 1B).
Localization of oenocytes and the LmCYP4G102 transcript
To further study the function of LmCYP4G102, we determined its expression pattern and localization. The LmCYP4G102 transcript was virtually expressed only in the integument and fat bodies, and no significant transcript levels were detected by RT-qPCR in the remaining 11 tissues tested, including antenna, brain, foregut, gastric caeca, midgut, hindgut, testis, ovary, muscle, Malpighian tubules and haemolymph, from fifth-instar nymphs of L. migratoria (Fig. 2A).
To determine the localization of LmCYP4G102 mRNA in the integument of L. migratoria, we performed fluorescence in situ hybridization. A histological examination of the paraffin sections of the abdomen from the first-instar nymphs revealed that oenocytes were clustered underneath the abdominal epidermis and were closely associated with the fat bodies (Fig. 2B). We found that the LmCYP4G102 transcript was predominately expressed in these oenocytes (Fig. 2B). These results consistently indicate that LmCYP4G102 is specifically expressed in oenocytes that are associated with the fat bodies underneath the integument.
Effect of LmCYP4G102 RNAi on locust nymphs
To investigate the biological roles of LmCYP4G102 in L. migratoria, we performed an RNA interference (RNAi) assay on newly moulted fourth-instar nymphs. To assess the efficiency of the RNAi, we verified the transcription level 24 h after dsRNA injection by using RT-qPCR. The injection of dsLmCYP4G102 led to a significant decrease in the LmCYP4G102 transcript (Fig. 3A). The suppression of LmCYP4G102 had no effect on nymph development, and the nymphs could moult to the next stage; however, the newly moulted nymphs died shortly (<24 h) after moulting, with 100% cumulative mortality. The nymphs exhibited curly antennae and crumpled cuticle (Fig. 3B). Such dsLmCYP4G102-induced effects were essentially the same when the dsRNA was injected into second-, third-, fourth- and fifth-instar nymphs. When the fourth-instar nymphs were injected with dsLmCYP4G102, the body weight of the fifth-instar nymphs decreased by approximately 14.3% at 2 h after moulting, whereas the body weight decreased only 1.4% in dsGFP-injected nymphs (Fig. 3C).
These results suggest that lethality caused by dsLmCYP4G102 injection is due to loss of water. To test this possibility we asked whether high humidity would rescue lethality. Fourth-instar locusts that had been injected with dsLmCYP4G102 were transferred from 50% relative humidity (RH) to 90% RH on day 7 before moulting. The dsLmCYP4G102-injected locusts could moult to the next stage and developed normally at 90% RH (Fig. 4A). After three days at 90% RH, we transferred them to an atmosphere with 50% RH. However, unlike dsLmCYP4G102-injected control locusts at 90% RH and dsGFP-injected control locusts at 50% RH, approximately 87.6% humidity-rescued dsLmCYP4G102 locusts became dehydrated and died after 24 h at 50% RH (Fig. 4).
The dead nymphs that had been injected with dsLmCYP4G102 were brittle and fragile in response to pressure (Fig. 5A). This observation suggests that the mechanical properties of the cuticle may depend on LmCYP4G102 function. Our compression tests confirmed that dsLmCYP4G102-injected insects required less strain for deformation than did dsGFP-injected insects (Fig. 5B). Our results suggest that stress resistance of the cuticle of dsLmCYP4G102-injected insects was significantly reduced compared to that of the control insects that were injected with dsGFP.
Analysis of cuticular hydrocarbons (CHCs)
Our GC-MS analyses of CHCs showed that dsGFP-injected locusts had a mixture of hydrocarbons that primarily corresponded to alkanes (lacking of alkenes), including n-alkanes and branched alkanes. The major branched alkanes included 3-methylalkanes; mixtures of 9-, 13-, 15-, and 17-methylalkanes; and dimethylalkane. N-nonacosane (C29) was present in large quantities (Supplementary Table S1). The total alkane content differed significantly between the dsLmCYP4G102- and dsGFP- injected groups but did not differ between males and females (Fig. 6A). The mean values of total alkanes per locust were 80.30 ± 9.85 μg and 17.53 ± 2.69 μg for dsGFP- and dsLmCYP4G102-injected females, respectively, and 88.95 ± 11.05 μg and 15.37 ± 2.58 μg for dsGFP- and dsLmCYP4G102-injected males, respectively. These results showed significant differences between the dsGFP- and dsLmCYP4G102-injected insects in both females and males. However, the number of alkane peaks was not noticeably different between the dsGFP-injected and dsLmCYP4G102-injected locusts. Apparently, such a dramatic decrease in dsLmCYP4G102-injected locusts was due to decreases in all different alkanes, largely due to decreased n-nonacosane (C29) contents (Fig. 6B and Supplementary Table S1).
Discussion
Cytochrome P450s have essential physiological functions and play a major role in the adaptation of insects to their environment1. In the present work, we identified an oenocyte-specific cytochrome P450 gene of the CYP4 family, LmCYP4G102, in the migratory locust Locusta migratoria that is needed for cuticle barrier function and stability.
LmCYP4G102 belongs to the CYP4 family of cytochrome P450 proteins and is expressed in the oenocytes
The CYP4 family is one of the most ancient and diversified CYP groups1. The LmCYP4G102 protein sequence exhibits a high similarity to members of the subfamily 4G, which represent very few CYP orthologues distributed across Insecta5. Although specialized roles of some CYP4G subfamily enzymes have been reported, the physiological roles of many of these enzymes remain unknown or theoretical. For example, CYP4G8 and CYP4G19 are overexpressed in pyrethroid-resistant strains of Helicoverpa armigera26 and Blattella germanica27, respectively, suggesting their possible involvement in pyrethroid resistance. A study on CYP4G15 in the fruit fly D. melanogaster demonstrated its expression in the central nervous system, which suggests its role in metabolism of endogenous compounds rather than the detoxification of xenobiotics28. In the cabbage armyworm M. brassicae, the expression of CYP4G20 in antennae may be related to its metabolic role as various odorants and xenobiotics enter the olfactory sensillae from the external environment12. In Antheraea yamamai, CYP4G25 was found to be expressed in the integument during insect diapause; therefore, its role was hypothesized to be in the diapause termination pathway29. In D. melanogaster, CYP4G1 is the only CYP gene that has been detected in oenocytes so far and is known for its role in the synthesis of CHCs5. Our in situ hybridization data showed that LmCYP4G102 was specifically expressed in oenocytes in L. migratoria. Although our tissue-dependent expression profiles ofLmCYP4G102 demonstrated its predominant expression in the integument and the fat bodies of L. migratoria (Fig. 2A), we think that this expression pattern is due to the strong association of oenocytes with the integument and the fat bodies.
LmCYP4G102 is involved in production of cuticular hydrocarbons
A layer of lipids coating the cuticular surface is considered as an important constituent of the waterproof barrier to control cuticular water loss in insects21,22,23. Cuticular hydrocarbons (CHCs) have been demonstrated to be the main components of this layer in many species30,31. Hydrocarbons comprise 37.6 and 50.7% of cuticular lipids extracted from the adult body of male and female L. migratoria, respectively30. RNAi against CYP4G102 provoked reduced levels of total CHCs, largely due to decreased n-nonacosane (C29) contents. In D. melanogaster, the RNAi knockdown of CYP4G1 in oenocytes resulted in the elimination of almost all of the CHCs. Moreover, this gene has been functionally characterized in heterologous expression systems, showing that CYP4G1 is an oxidative decarboxylase that converts long-chain aldehydes into hydrocarbons5. Because CHCs biosynthesis takes place in oenocytes20, those genes that are expressed in these cells are candidates for their involvement in CHC synthesis. In summary, our data demonstrate that the oenocyte-specific cytochrome P450 gene, LmCYP4G102, which is homologous to D. melanogaster CYP4G1, participates at the production of cuticular alkanes in L. migratoria. The exact biochemical function of LmCYP4G102 remains to be investigated.
LmCYP4G102 is involved in the formation of a barrier against water loss
Maintaining water balance is critical for insect survival in terrestrial environments. Our data demonstrate that locusts that were injected with dsLmCYP4G102 died within a few hours after moulting when they were maintained at 30 °C and 50% RH, which are standard rearing conditions for locusts. These insects lost body weight quickly, much faster than did the control locusts that were injected with dsGFP (Fig. 3C). Rapid loss of body weight is conceivably due to rapid water loss. This defect could be countered by maintaining the dsLmCYP4G102-injected locusts at high humidity (90%) (Fig. 4). Taken together, LmCYP4G102 is needed to establish a barrier against uncontrolled water loss. Most probably, this barrier function relies on an intact cuticle.
Cuticle stiffness depends on LmCYP4G102
The mechanical properties of the cuticle depend to a large extent on the presence of water24. When we used a compression test to examine the mechanical properties of the cuticles of dehydrated and dead nymphs after injection with dsLmCYP4G102, we found that the respective locusts could easily break apart after mechanical challenge. Compared to the control nymphs that were injected with dsGFP, the nymphs that were injected with dsLmCYP4G102 could withstand much less mechanical force (Fig. 5B). It is well known that the mechanical properties, i.e. stiffness and elasticity of the insect cuticle are modulated by the water content32,33,34,35. Accordingly, previous studies indicated that the endocuticle of locusts becomes harder by a factor of up to 9 and stiffer by a factor of up to 7.4 after drying24. Based on our data, we propose that massive water loss in dsLmCYP4G102-injected locusts results in an increased fragility of the cuticle. Thus, CYP4G102 in L. migratoria seems to play a critical albeit indirect role in resistance of the cuticle against mechanical stress.
Conclusion
We identified and characterized an oenocyte-specific cytochrome P450 gene, LmCYP4G102, from L. migratoria. Several lines of evidence - including a dramatic decrease in total cuticular alkane content, a rapid decrease of body weight probably due to rapid water loss, a significant increase in cuticular brittleness in dsLmCYP4G102-injected locusts - support our conclusion that LmCYP4G102 plays a critical role in cuticular waterproofing and stability and is therefore essential for insect survival. In summary, LmCYP4G102 seems to have a similar function as the oenocyte-specific CYP protein DmCYP4G1, a well-characterized enzyme implied in the biosynthesis of cuticular hydrocarbons in D. melanogaster. This work, hence, underlines the importance of the oenocytes in cuticle formation and function.
Materials and Methods
Insect Rearing
L. migratoria were purchased from Insect Protein Co., Ltd., Cangzhou City, China, and reared in a growth chamber at 30 ± 2 °C and 40 ± 10% relative humidity (RH). The locusts were fed fresh wheat sprouts under a 14:10-h light:dark photoperiod. For the high humidity rescue experiments, fourth-instar nymphs injected with dsRNA were transferred to a humidity chamber (90%RH) at 30 °C on day 7 before moulting.
Sequencing of cDNA encoding CYPs
CYP-like genes from L. migratoria were obtained by searching the locust transcriptome database. A cDNA sequence putatively encoding an enzyme of the CYP4 family was selected for subsequent work. The translated amino acid sequence was searched using BLASTP in the NCBI database (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/) to further reveal its identity. To sequence the full-length cDNA of the CYP gene, M-MLV Reverse Transcriptase (TaKaRa, Japan) and an oligo-(dT)18 primer (TaKaRa, Japan) were used to synthesize the first-strand cDNA with 1 μg of total RNA that was extracted from the whole body of fifth-instar nymphs by RNAiso Plus (TaKaRa, Japan). PCR was performed with the synthetic cDNA and gene-specific primers (Table 1). Specific fragments were purified with a gel purification kit (Omega, USA), cloned into the pEASY-T3 vector (TransGen, China), and completely sequenced from both directions.
Deduced amino acid sequences and gene structure analysis of LmCYP4G102
The prediction of the open reading frame (ORF) and the translation of the cDNA sequence into amino acid sequence were performed using the Translate tool on the ExPASy Proteomics web site (http://web.expasy.org/translate/). The locust CYP gene was finally named CYP4G102 by the P450 Gene Family Nomenclature Committee (Dr. D.R. Nelson, University of Tennessee, Memphis).
To compare the amino acid sequences and conserved domains, sequence alignments of the deduced amino acid sequences of insect CYP4Gs were performed using GeneDoc software. The conserved motifs of CYPs were identified based on references previously described by Feyereisen1. The molecular weight (Mw) were predicted using the Compute pI/Mw tool (http://web.expasy.org/compute pi/). To reveal the genomic structure of LmCYP4G102, BLASTN was used to search the exons and introns in the L. migratoria assembly genome database (GenBank: GCA_000516895.1). The GT-AG rule was used to distinguish exon-intron boundaries throughout the whole process.
Tissue-dependent expression of LmCYP4G102
To analyse tissue expression profiles, different tissues, including antenna, brain, integument, foregut, gastric caeca, midgut, hindgut, fat bodies, testis, ovary, muscle, Malpighian tubules and haemolymph, were dissected from 3-day-old fifth-instar nymphs of L. migratoria. Total RNA was isolated with three replications using RNAiso plus (TaKaRa, Japan) according to the manufacturer’s instructions. The extracted RNA was treated with RNase-free DNaseI (Takara, Japan) to remove genomic DNA. The quality and quantity of RNA were verified on a 1% agarose gel and with a NanoDrop 2000 spectrophotometer (Thermo Fisher Scientific, USA), respectively.
One microgram of total RNA was used to synthesize the first-strand cDNA with M-MLV Reverse Transcriptase (Takara, Japan). The tissue-dependent expression profiles of LmCYP4G102 were measured by reverse transcription quantitative PCR (RT-qPCR). Rp49 was used as a reference gene for normalization36. The LmCYP4G102- and Rp49-specific primers that were used for the RT-qPCR analysis are shown in Table 1. RT-qPCR was performed using the SYBR Green qPCR Master Mix (TOYOBO, Japan) on an ABI 7300 detection system (ABI, USA). The cycling conditions were 1 min at 95 °C and 40 cycles of 15 s at 95 °C and 31 s at 60 °C. The melting curve was evaluated for each RT-qPCR experiment to confirm the amplification specificity. The PCR reactions were performed in three biological replicates, with a technical duplicate for each RNA sample. The relative expression was determined using the 2−ΔΔCt method of relative quantification37.
Fluorescence in situ hybridization
Digoxigenin (DIG)-labelled antisense and sense probes of LmCYP4G102 were generated from linearized recombinant pGEM-T plasmids using the Dig RNA-Labelling Kit (Roche, Switzerland) according to the manufacturer’s instructions.
The primers that were used for the probe synthesis of LmCYP4G102 are listed in Table 1. The abdomens of first-instar nymphs were fixed in 4% (wt/vol) paraformaldehyde at 4 °C overnight. The samples were embedded in paraffin by a conventional method. Sections (5 μm) were prepared and mounted onto SuperFrost Plus slides and used for haematoxylin and eosin (H & E) staining and fluorescence in situ hybridization. For fluorescence in situ hybridization, the paraffin-embedded tissue slides were deparaffinized in xylene and rehydrated with an ethanol gradient. After digestion with 20 μg/mL proteinase K (Roche, Switzerland) at 37 °C for 30 min, the tissues were prehybridized with prehybridization solution (Boster, China). The slides were then hybridized with LmCYP4G102 probes (DIG-labelled antisense or sense RNA) in a humid box at 37 °C overnight. After hybridization, the slides were successively washed in 2 × SSC, 1 × SSC, and 0.2 × SSC at 37 °C and then incubated in anti-digoxigenin-alkaline phosphatase conjugate (1:150 dilution) for 30 min at 37 °C for probe detection. The fluorescent signal of digoxigenin (DIG) was obtained by HNPP/Fast Red (Roche, Switzerland). Then, the nuclei were stained with DAPI for 10 min at room temperature. Images were captured on an LSM 710 confocal fluorescence microscope (Zeiss, Germany) at magnifications of 20X and 63X.
RNA interference analysis of LmCYP4G102
Double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) was synthesized as previously described38. The specific primers with the T7 RNA polymerase promoter sequence at the 5′-end that were used for dsGFP and dsLmCYP4G102 synthesis are shown in Table 1. The synthesized dsRNA was dissolved in nuclease-free water, and the final concentration of dsRNA was adjusted to 1.5 μg/μl. Aliquots of 6 μg (4 μl) of dsRNA of LmCYP4G102 or GFP were injected into the abdomen (between the second and third abdominal segments) of the newly moulted fourth-instar nymphs using a manual microsyringe (Ningbo, China). dsGFP-injected nymphs were used as negative controls. Each group consisted of 50 individual nymphs, and the experiment was carried out in three replicates. To analyse the suppression level of LmCYP4G102 transcripts, cDNAs were synthesized from total RNA that had been isolated from whole nymphs 24 h after dsRNA injections. The total RNA was independently isolated for each of the three replications.
The body weight of dsGFP- and dsLmCYP4G102-injected nymphs (n = 10 each group) was measured from 0 to 24 h after moulting into fifth-instar nymphs. However, dead locusts were excluded from this evaluation. The results were calculated as the percentages of the body weight change, and data are shown as means ± SE.
Uniaxial compression test
A uniaxial compression test was used to determine the mechanical behaviour of dead nymphs that were injected with dsLmCYP4G102 or dsGFP. Treated and control insects were maintained under the same conditions (30 °C, 50% RH). The insects were compressed between two metal plates with a 50-N load cell and a constant displacement rate of 5 mm/min using Instron 5544 tester (Instron, USA). A computer was used to record the displacement and load signals throughout the entire loading process. For the stress-strain curves of specimens, the compressive stress was the ratio of the applied load (in N) to the original specimen area, whereas the compressive strain was the ratio of the deformation to the specimen.
Extraction and quantification of cuticular hydrocarbons (CHCs)
Aliquots of 3 μg of LmCYP4G102 dsRNA were injected into 2-day-old second-instar nymphs. The surviving nymphs were collected after moulting to the next stage. Each nymph was identified by sex, weighed, immersed in 0.5 mL of hexane, and agitated gently for 2 min, after which the solvent was decanted into a clean vial. This procedure was repeated two more times. The three hexane extracts were combined and subjected to CHC purification and analysis by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) on a TRACE 1310 coupled to an ISQ single-quadrupole MS detector with Xcalibur 2.2 software (Thermo Fisher Scientific, USA). The splitless injection of 1 μL was made into a HP-5MS UI capillary column (30 m × 0.32 mm × 0.25 μm). The carrier gas was helium with a flow of 1 mL/min. The initial temperature was held at 60 °C for 2 min, increased to 200 °C at a rate of 30 °C/min, and then increased to 320 °C and held for 10 min. Some of the alkanes were identified by their retention times compared to those of known standards (C7-C40 saturated alkanes Std, SUPELCO). The remaining alkanes were identified by Kovats retention index (I), which was calculated by an equation using retention time. These alkanes were quantified by their peak areas compared to that of the internal standard.
Statistical analysis
All of the statistical analyses were performed using the SPSS program (SPSS Inc., USA). The LmCYP4G102 relative expression levels were subjected to ANOVA followed by Tukey’s honestly significant difference (HSD) test to separate the mean values among tissues. The silencing efficiency of LmCYP4G102, the uniaxial compression results and the comparisons of the cuticular hydrocarbons between dsLmCYP4G102 treatments and dsGFP controls were analysed using Student’s t-test. The comparison in body weight changes between the dsLmCYP4G102- and dsGFP-injected insects were analysed using Independent-sample t-test. P < 0.05 was set as significant for the comparisons.
Additional Information
How to cite this article: Yu, Z. et al. LmCYP4G102: An oenocyte-specific cytochrome P450 gene required for cuticular waterproofing in the migratory locust, Locusta migratoria. Sci. Rep. 6, 29980; doi: 10.1038/srep29980 (2016).
Accession codes
References
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Acknowledgements
This work was supported by National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant No. 31320103921, 31272380), and the platform construction project of science and technology from Shanxi province (Grant No. 2015091010).The authors would like to give special thanks to Prof. Le Kang in the Institute of Zoology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, for sharing the resources of the locust EST and genome database platform. We also thank Yongliang Fan and Nan Chen from Northwest Agriculture & Forestry University for use of the gas chromatograph-mass spectrometer and for the GC-MS analyses.
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Z.Y. conceived and coordinated the study and wrote the paper. Z.Y., X.Z. and Y.W. analysed the data. B.M. and S.L. provided technical assistance and helpful comments on an earlier draft of the manuscript. K.Y.Z., B.M., E.M. and J.Z. contributed to the experiment design and manuscript preparation. All authors reviewed the manuscript.
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Yu, Z., Zhang, X., Wang, Y. et al. LmCYP4G102: An oenocyte-specific cytochrome P450 gene required for cuticular waterproofing in the migratory locust, Locusta migratoria. Sci Rep 6, 29980 (2016). https://doi.org/10.1038/srep29980
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/srep29980
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