Abstract

The oviduct serves as a delivery tube for mature eggs ovulated from ovaries to egg-laying sites. Oviduct secreted components play important roles in ovulation and fertilization in mammals, however, no oviduct secreted protein has been characterized in an insect to date. Here, we identified a gene highly expressed in the lateral oviduct of the adult females in the brown planthopper (BPH), Nilaparvata lugens, the most destructive rice insect pest. Western blotting and immunofluorescence analyses revealed that the gene encodes a protein that is specifically expressed in the lateral oviduct as a component of the gel-like material secreted by the oviduct epithelial cells into the lumen of the swollen part of the lateral oviducts. The protein was tentatively named N. lugens oviduct secreted protein (Nlodsp). RNA interference (RNAi) against NlOdsp transcripts caused a failure of the lateral oviducts to deliver oocytes to the common oviduct that was, by consequence, plugged by 1–2 oocytes. Moreover, although oocytes in the Nlodsp-deficient ovariole were not released to the oviduct, they continued to develop, finally resulting in the presence of several matured oocytes in an ovariole. These defects evidently declined female fecundity. Together, our results demonstrate that NlOdsp plays an essential role in egg transport through the oviduct during ovulation. This work deepens our understanding of insect reproductive system and provides a potential target gene for RNAi-based insect pest control.

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