Abstract

Ecdysteroids play an important role in regulating diverse physiological processes in arthropods, such as molting, metamorphosis, reproduction and diapause. Ecdysteroids mediate the response by binding to a heterodimeric complex of two nuclear receptors: the ecdysone receptor and the ultraspiracle (USP). To investigate the role of USP in development of the Asian gypsy moth (Lymantria dispar), a USP cDNA was obtained from the transcriptome of L. dispar and verified by PCR. In-depth profiling of transcript levels of L. dispar USP-1 (LdUSP-1) at different developmental stages and over time in third-instar larvae and different tissues isolated during the third-instar stage of L. dispar was then carried out. Transcript levels of LdUSP-1 were relatively high before 72 h in the third-instar larvae after ecdysis and in the adult male. The function of LdUSP-1 in molting was analyzed by knockdown of LdUSP-1 in third instar larvae using RNA interference. Silencing of LdUSP-1 significantly downregulated the transcript level of E75, an ecdysone-inducible gene, and of Sad, a Halloween gene. In addition, the duration of the third-instar stage was slightly shortened and larval mortality increased after the LdUSP-1 knockdown.

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