Abstract
BackgroundNutritional symbioses play a central role in insects’ adaptation to specialized diets and in their evolutionary success. The obligatory symbiosis between the pea aphid, Acyrthosiphon pisum, and the bacterium, Buchnera aphidicola, is no exception as it enables this important agricultural pest insect to develop on a diet exclusively based on plant phloem sap. The symbiotic bacteria provide the host with essential amino acids lacking in its diet but necessary for the rapid embryonic growth seen in the parthenogenetic viviparous reproduction of aphids. The aphid furnishes, in exchange, non-essential amino acids and other important metabolites. Understanding the regulations acting on this integrated metabolic system during the development of this insect is essential in elucidating aphid biology.ResultsWe used a microarray-based approach to analyse gene expression in the late embryonic and the early larval stages of the pea aphid, characterizing, for the first time, the transcriptional profiles in these developmental phases. Our analyses allowed us to identify key genes in the phenylalanine, tyrosine and dopamine pathways and we identified ACYPI004243, one of the four genes encoding for the aspartate transaminase (E.C. 2.6.1.1), as specifically regulated during development. Indeed, the tyrosine biosynthetic pathway is crucial for the symbiotic metabolism as it is shared between the two partners, all the precursors being produced by B. aphidicola. Our microarray data are supported by HPLC amino acid analyses demonstrating an accumulation of tyrosine at the same developmental stages, with an up-regulation of the tyrosine biosynthetic genes. Tyrosine is also essential for the synthesis of cuticular proteins and it is an important precursor for cuticle maturation: together with the up-regulation of tyrosine biosynthesis, we observed an up-regulation of cuticular genes expression. We were also able to identify some amino acid transporter genes which are essential for the switch over to the late embryonic stages in pea aphid development.ConclusionsOur data show that, in the development of A. pisum, a specific host gene set regulates the biosynthetic pathways of amino acids, demonstrating how the regulation of gene expression enables an insect to control the production of metabolites crucial for its own development and symbiotic metabolism.
Highlights
Nutritional symbioses play a central role in insects’ adaptation to specialized diets and in their evolutionary success
This is true for aphids that feed on phloem sap [4], a very unbalanced diet that is characterized by a high concentration of sucrose and by very low levels of several essential amino acids crucial to the development of these metazoans [5]
Global analysis of gene expression during embryonic development Using the newly developed “INRA-BF2I_A.pisum_Nim blegen-ACYPI_4x72k_v1” microarray (ArrayExpress design ID: A-MEXP-1999), built on the pea aphid genome v1.0 assembly [23], we obtained gene expression profiles of aphid embryos belonging to three distinct groups, namely early (EE), intermediate (IE) and late (LE) embryos, collected according to their developmental stage, together with aphids at their first larval stage (L1)
Summary
Nutritional symbioses play a central role in insects’ adaptation to specialized diets and in their evolutionary success. Endosymbiosis is, a central process in these animals and more than 10% of insect species depend on intracellular bacteria for their development and survival [3] This is true for aphids that feed on phloem sap [4], a very unbalanced diet that is characterized by a high concentration of sucrose and by very low levels of several essential amino acids crucial to the development of these metazoans [5]. The vertical transmission process of the symbionts is vital for the reproductive success of aphids and it takes place at the end of blastoderm formation in the A. pisum embryonic development [13,14] At this stage, approximately 1000 Buchnera aphidicola bacteria are transmitted from maternal bacteriocytes to a single viviparous embryo, and they increase in number by 120 fold during the remaining embryonic development [1,13,15,16,17]
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