Abstract

For plant-eating insects, we still have only a nascent understanding of the genetic basis of host-use promiscuity. Here, to improve that situation, we investigated host-induced gene expression plasticity in the invasive lobate lac scale insect, Paratachardina pseudolobata (Hemiptera: Keriidae). We were particularly interested in the differential expression of detoxification and effector genes, which are thought to be critical for overcoming a plant’s chemical defenses. We collected RNA samples from P. pseudolobata on three different host plant species, assembled transcriptomes de novo, and identified transcripts with significant host-induced gene expression changes. Gene expression plasticity was pervasive, but the expression of most detoxification and effector genes was insensitive to the host environment. Nevertheless, some types of detoxification genes were more differentially expressed than expected by chance. Moreover, we found evidence of a trade-off between expression of genes involved in primary and secondary metabolism; hosts that induced lower expression of genes for detoxification induced higher expression of genes for growth. Our findings are largely consonant with those of several recently published studies of other plant-eating insect species. Thus, across plant-eating insect species, there may be a common set of gene expression changes that enable host-use promiscuity.

Highlights

  • The overwhelming majority of plant-eating insect species are host-specialists that consume only one or a few closely-related plant species [1, 2]

  • We find further evidence that detoxification genes account for only a small part of all host-induced gene expression changes, and that there is a trade-off between expression of genes for detoxification and those for primary metabolism

  • We assumed that host use in a plant-eating insect is limited by their capacity to cope with the chemical defenses of plant species, but we knew little about the details

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Summary

Introduction

The overwhelming majority of plant-eating insect species are host-specialists that consume only one or a few closely-related plant species [1, 2]. Plant-eating insect communities predictably include a few species that are host-generalists, some of which can have extremely broad diets [2, 3]. These generalists are critical elements in terrestrial food webs; their high. Gene expression plasticity in an invasive scale insect species matrix_counts_matrix/4788583

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