Abstract

The cattle tick, Rhipicephalus microplus, is a serious pest of cattle, with significant economic consequences to the livestock industries of tropical and semitropical countries. Rhipicephalus microplus belongs to the Metastriata group of the Ixodidae family known as hard ticks. When adult hard ticks feed, mating has not yet occurred and an initial host attachment phase of 1-2days is followed by a slow feeding phase that can last several days. Once mating occurs, feeding concludes with a rapid engorgement phase that is completed in 12-36h. Our group's interest in mining the genome and transcriptome of R. microplus for novel targets for development of tick control technologies led us to investigate the early transcriptional events occurring upon tick attachment and subsequent feeding. We placed newly molted unfed adult R. microplus females upon a bovine host and harvested the attached ticks after 3, 6, 12, and 24h. We also placed a group of these ticks in a gas-permeable tube taped onto the side of the bovine host. These ticks were able to sense the host but unable to penetrate the tube to begin attachment and were ultimately harvested after 3h. This study produced a comprehensive transcriptome from newly molted adult ticks and will provide a useful resource for studies of tick feeding and host perception and also assist genome annotation refinements.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call