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1.
Vet Parasitol ; 304: 109699, 2022 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35390642

RESUMO

The horn fly, Haematobia irritans, is a blood-feeding parasitic fly with a global distribution that includes Europe, Africa, Asia, and the Americas. The fly has a major detrimental economic impact upon cattle production, with losses estimated at over $800 million annually in the United States and $2.5 billion in Brazil alone. Insecticide resistance in specific horn fly populations has been a problem for many years and there are several mechanisms whereby resistance develops. Little is known about the complement of metabolic enzymes encoded by the horn fly's genome that might provide the fly with detoxification or sequestration pathways to survive insecticide treatments. The cytochrome P450, glutathione S-transferase, and esterase enzyme families contain members that are capable of sequestering and/or detoxifying xenobiotic molecules such as insecticides. We sought to develop a comprehensive dataset of metabolic enzyme-encoding transcript sequences from the adult horn fly, as this is the life stage whose actions directly impose the economic costs to cattle producers. We used an Illumina paired-end read RNA-Seq approach to determine the adult horn fly transcriptomes from laboratory and field populations of horn flies with varying levels of pesticide resistance, including untreated and pyrethroid-treated newly eclosed adult flies. We followed with bioinformatic analyses to discern sequences putatively encoding cytochrome P450, esterase, and GST enzymes. We utilized read-mapping of RNA-Seq data and quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR) to examine gene expression levels of specific P450 transcripts in several fly populations with varying degrees of pesticide resistance.


Assuntos
Inseticidas , Muscidae , Animais , Bovinos , Sistema Enzimático do Citocromo P-450/genética , Esterases/genética , Glutationa , Humanos , Resistência a Inseticidas/genética , Inseticidas/farmacologia , Muscidae/genética , Transcriptoma , Transferases/genética
2.
Nat Genet ; 51(5): 877-884, 2019 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31043755

RESUMO

Like many other crops, the cultivated peanut (Arachis hypogaea L.) is of hybrid origin and has a polyploid genome that contains essentially complete sets of chromosomes from two ancestral species. Here we report the genome sequence of peanut and show that after its polyploid origin, the genome has evolved through mobile-element activity, deletions and by the flow of genetic information between corresponding ancestral chromosomes (that is, homeologous recombination). Uniformity of patterns of homeologous recombination at the ends of chromosomes favors a single origin for cultivated peanut and its wild counterpart A. monticola. However, through much of the genome, homeologous recombination has created diversity. Using new polyploid hybrids made from the ancestral species, we show how this can generate phenotypic changes such as spontaneous changes in the color of the flowers. We suggest that diversity generated by these genetic mechanisms helped to favor the domestication of the polyploid A. hypogaea over other diploid Arachis species cultivated by humans.


Assuntos
Arachis/genética , Arachis/classificação , Argentina , Cromossomos de Plantas/genética , Produtos Agrícolas/genética , Metilação de DNA , DNA de Plantas/genética , Domesticação , Evolução Molecular , Regulação da Expressão Gênica de Plantas , Variação Genética , Genoma de Planta , Hibridização Genética , Fenótipo , Poliploidia , Recombinação Genética , Especificidade da Espécie , Tetraploidia
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