Abstract

Acalymma vittatum (F.), the striped cucumber beetle, is an important pest of cucurbit crops in the contintental United States, damaging plants through both direct feeding and vectoring of a bacterial wilt pathogen. Besides providing basic biological knowledge, biosequence data for A. vittatum would be useful towards the development of molecular biopesticides to complement existing population control methods. However, no such datasets currently exist. In this study, three biological replicates apiece of male and female adult insects were sequenced and assembled into a set of 630,139 transcripts (of which 232,899 exhibited hits to one or more sequences in NCBI NR). Quantitative analyses identified 2898 genes differentially expressed across the male–female divide, and qualitative analyses characterized the insect’s resistome, comprising the glutathione S-transferase, carboxylesterase, and cytochrome P450 monooxygenase families of xenobiotic detoxification genes. In summary, these data provide useful insights into genes associated with sex differentiation and this beetle’s innate genetic capacity to develop resistance to synthetic pesticides; furthermore, these genes may serve as useful targets for potential use in molecular-based biocontrol technologies.

Highlights

  • The striped cucumber beetle, Acalymma vittatum (F.) (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae), is a specialist herbivore of cucurbit crops, native to North America east of the Rocky Mountains

  • This study identified 2898 differentially expressed A. vittatum genes traditional, chemical insecticides

  • Salmon/DESeq2-based, gene-level analyses among 290,005 genes with a non-zero read count indicated 1896 genes were more abundantly expressed in males and 1002 in females—to wit, approximately 1.0% of candidate loci were flagged as differentially expressed genes (DEGs)

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Summary

Introduction

The striped cucumber beetle, Acalymma vittatum (F.) (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae), is a specialist herbivore of cucurbit crops, native to North America east of the Rocky Mountains. It is the primary pest of these crops in northeastern and midwestern USA and eastern Canada, mainly through damage to seedlings and young plants [1,2], as well as transmission of the virulent bacterial wilt pathogen. Adults feed primarily on above-ground parts of Cucurbitaceae and larvae primarily underground. There are one to three generations per year, with adults being the overwintering stage. Larvae have three instars lasting a total of 11 to 45 days [1,2].

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