Abstract
Background
The German cockroach, Blattella germanica, is an important insect pest that transmits various pathogens mechanically and causes severe allergic diseases. This insect has long served as a model system for studies of insect biology, physiology and ecology. However, the lack of genome or transcriptome information heavily hinder our further understanding about the German cockroach in every aspect at a molecular level and on a genome-wide scale. To explore the transcriptome and identify unique sequences of interest, we subjected the B. germanica transcriptome to massively parallel pyrosequencing and generated the first reference transcriptome for B. germanica.
Methodology/Principal Findings
A total of 1,365,609 raw reads with an average length of 529 bp were generated via pyrosequencing the mixed cDNA library from different life stages of German cockroach including maturing oothecae, nymphs, adult females and males. The raw reads were de novo assembled to 48,800 contigs and 3,961 singletons with high-quality unique sequences. These sequences were annotated and classified functionally in terms of BLAST, GO and KEGG, and the genes putatively coding detoxification enzyme systems, insecticide targets, key components in systematic RNA interference, immunity and chemoreception pathways were identified. A total of 3,601 SSRs (Simple Sequence Repeats) loci were also predicted.
Conclusions/Significance
The whole transcriptome pyrosequencing data from this study provides a usable genetic resource for future identification of potential functional genes involved in various biological processes.
Introduction
Cockroaches are one of the most ancient and primitive winged insects, which have existed successfully and remained virtually unchanged in body morphology for approximately 350 million years from the Carboniferous to present [1]. There are about 3,500 known species of cockroaches globally, only thirty are considered as household pests. Among them, the German cockroach (Blattella germanica) is listed as one of the most important public health related insect pests [2], because it is highly dependent on human for survival and can transmit mechanically a number of pathogenic viruses, fungi, helminths and bacteria (with some exhibiting resistance to antibiotics) [3], [4]. For nearly a half century, the worldwide occurrence of allergic respiratory morbidity, especially in childhood, has been considered to be closely related to the German cockroach infestation [5], [6]. On the other hand, the German cockroach, a phylogenetically basal species showing a gradual metamorphosis, has also been considered as an important model for scientific studies regarding reproduction, metamorphosis, neurophysiology, behavioral and chemical ecology, allergen biology, nutrition metabolism and insecticide resistance [1].
Despite its medical significance and prominence as a model in entomological study, our understanding about the German cockroach has been largely hindered by the lack of thorough genetic information. Previous efforts in this direction were limited to a few low-throughput EST projects such as subtractive hybridization [7] and cDNA library Sanger sequencing [8]. Until now, only 2,876 short ESTs are publicly available at the NCBI (National Center for Biotechnology Information) website. No complete picture has been achieved even at the scale of a specific gene family. For example, cytochrome P450s (CYPs) have been highly recognized as a super gene family with 36 to 180 genes existed in insect genomes [9], while only 7 CYP genes with a full-length coding region can be accessed for B. germanica in GenBank. This scarcity of genetic information in B. germanica has also resulted in a paucity of genetic studies and integrated theories for understanding its basic biology.
B. germanica was in the list of the 5,000 Insect Genome Project (i5k), a huge project that has been initiated recently. EST or transcriptome sequencing could not only be useful for the assembly and annotation of genomic data, but also as an efficient and feasible alternative approach to obtain genetic information. Next-generation sequencing (NGS) platforms, such as Roche 454 Genome Sequencer FLX System (454), Illumina Genome Analyzer (Solexa) and Applied Biosystems SOLiD system (SOLiD), have been increasingly used and dramatically accelerated biological and biomedical research on a genome-wide scale. The most significant advantage of NGS over traditional Sanger-sequencing is its massively parallel sequencing ability with significant low cost for DNA sequencing [10]–[12]. The 454 pyrosequencing is very suitable for a non-model species, enabling high efficient de novo sequencing, assembly and annotation of expressed genes [13], [14], thus has been widely applied in a broad range of arthropod species including Cimex lectularius [15], [16], Anopheles funestus [17], Aedes aegypti [18], Dermacentor variabilis [19], Musca domestica [20], Sarcophaga crassipalpis [21], Cochliomyia hominivorax [22], Anastrepha suspensa [23], Nilaparvata lugens [24],Manduca sexta [25], Lutzomyia intermedia [26], Amblyomma maculatum [27], Corethrella appendiculata [28] and Rhodnius prolixus [29]. For the German cockroach, Illumina sequencing was used to identify microRNAs from the ovaries and whole body of 6th instar nymphs [30]. In the present study, we attempt to explore the transcriptome of B. germanica using 454 pyrosequencing. We hope that the generated transcriptome database can serve as a valuable resource for better understandings of the molecular mechanisms underlying important biological processes and the environmental adaptability of the cockroach.
Materials and Methods
Ethics Statement
The German cockroach used in the present study is a common indoor insect pest, not an endangered and protected species. No permission was required to sample and collect the German cockroaches from the infested restaurants, where we scheduled routine cockroach density surveillance plan for the public health purpose.
Cockroaches
Two strains of German cockroach (B. germanica) BJ-S and DX-R, were used in this study. Both strains were kept separately in glass jars of the same size (13 liters), coated with petroleum jelly (top 1/5 of the jar) at 26±1°C and 60±10% relative humidity with a photoperiod of 12∶12 (L:D) h. Cockroaches were fed with laboratory rodent food (Beijing Huafukang Biotechnology) and water ad libitum. The susceptible strain (BJ-S) had been reared in the laboratory without exposure to any insecticide since 1970. A field strain (DX-R) was established from cockroaches collected in a local restaurant (Daxing district, Beijing) in 2011. The comparison in resistance of the two strains to several types of insecticides is shown in Table S1. The inclusion of this field collection in this study was to increase the genetic diversity and to obtain preliminary information about the differentially expressed genes associated with insecticide resistance for future studies. Cockroach samples for RNA extraction and quantification were collected and snap-frozen immediately in liquid N2 and stored at −80°C until use.
RNA isolation, cDNA library construction and 454 pyrosequencing
In order to obtain a transcriptomic dataset with a coverage as wide as possible, RNA was extracted from pooled samples of 30 maturing oothecae, 30 4th instar nymphs, 30 adult females and 30 adult males (7 days after eclosion) respectively from each strain. Total RNA was extracted using the Trizol reagent (Invitrogen, CA, USA) according to the manufacturer's instruction. The integrity of total RNA was assessed by both 1.4% denaturing formaldehyde agarose gel electrophoresis and the Agilent 2100 Bioanalyzer (Palo Alto, CA, USA) with a minimum integrity value of 8. The quantity of total RNA was determined by NanoDrop 1000 spectrophotometer (Thermo, MA, USA). Equal quantities (10 µL) of total RNA (1 µg/µL) from each of the four life stages were combined to form a RNA pool for each strain. mRNA was isolated by using PolyATtract mRNA isolation systems (Promega, WI, USA) from each total RNA pool. mRNA pools were concentrated by using RNeasy MinElute Cleanup Kit (Qiagen, Valencia, CA) and used as starting material for cDNA library construction.
Two cDNA libraries of BJ-S and DX-R strains were separately constructed from respective pooled mRNA samples for 454 pyrosequencing. Briefly, the mRNA was broken into short fragments in the presence of fragmentation buffer at 94°C for 5 min. These short fragments were used as templates for first-stranded cDNA synthesis using random hexamer primers. Subsequently, second-stranded cDNAs were synthesized using dNTPs, RNaseH and DNA polymerase I. DNA bands (500–800 bp) were excised and purified from agarose gels using the QIAquick Gel Extraction Kit (Qiagen, Valencia, CA). The isolated double-stranded cDNA were blunt-ended using T4 DNA polymerase and T4 polynucleotide kinase (PNK), then ligated to the adapters (Titanium A&B provided in the 454 library kit) with T4 DNA ligase, followed by immobilization on DNA capture beads. DNA capture beads were clonally amplified by emulsion PCR (emPCR) and enriched by removing the waste oil from the beads and selecting for beads with amplified library fragments. The beads were counted using a Beckman Coulter Z1 Particle Counter and loaded into the wells of PicoTiter plate (PTP). A single full PTP was sequenced with a half plate for each library following standard protocols described by Margulies [12] on a 454 GS FLX Titanium instrument (Roche Diagnostics, Indianapolis, IN).
Sequence preprocessing and de novo assembly
The raw 454 reads were produced by the base-calling process which transformed the measured pyroluminescence intensity signals to a sequence of nucleotides. These read can be accessed through NCBI Short Read Archive (SRA) under the accession code SRP042142. Raw reads were preprocessed by in-house developed tools, TagDust [31] and Seqclean [32] to trim the adapter, poly A/T tails and remove low-quality, short read data and contamination sequences. The resultant clean reads from both strains respectively were combined to assemble into unique sequences by the Newbler [12] assembler programs at default parameters. This Transcriptome Shotgun Assembly project has been deposited at DDBJ/EMBL/GenBank under the accession GBID00000000. The version described in this paper is the first version, GBID01000000.
Homology searches and EST annotation
The generated unigenes were firstly BLASTx searched against the Swiss-Prot [33] and NCBI non-redundant protein database. The sequences retrieving no BLASTx hit were searched by BLASTn against the NCBI nucleotide collection. Gene ontology (GO), KOG [34] and KEGG [35] analysis were used for functional classification of the annotated ESTs. For gene ontology analysis, both BLAST2GO [36], [37] and WEGO [38] were employed. The programs extracted the GO terms associated with homologies identified with BLAST and returned a list of GO annotations represented as hierarchical categories of increasing specificity.
Identification and analysis of genes of interest
Genes of interest were further manually examined to check for possible frameshifts caused by the 454 sequencing based on the annotated ESTs. All of the manually confirmed protein sequences were used for alignment and phylogenetic analysis. Alignments were implemented using BioEdit, and employed to reconstruct the phylogeny by using the MEGA6 software [39]. The neighbor-joining method was used to create phylogenetic trees with p-distance under the default parameters of MEGA program. Bootstrap analysis of 1000 replications was performed to evaluate the branch strength of each tree.
Results and Discussion
Pyrosequencing, assembly and annotation
Using Roche 454 GS-FLX platform, our single full run from two cockroach strains with each strain half-run yielded a total of 1,365,609 raw reads with an average length of 529 bp. After preprocessing the raw data (including adaptor trimming and removal of low-quality reads), 1,362,260 reads remained with a total amount of 42,110,570 bp and an average length of 520 bp. All the clean reads were assembled into 48,800 contigs and 3,961 singletons forming a total of 52,761 high-quality unigenes with an average length of 798 bp (Table 1). Of these unigenes, 12,146 (23.0%) were over 1000 bp in length, and 5504 (36.7%) were between 500–1000 bp. The length distribution of the reads and unigenes is shown in Figure 1.
Table 1. Summary statistics of the ESTs generated from the German cockroach through pyrosequencing.
Features | Values |
Total number of reads | 1,365,609 |
Average read length | 529 bp |
Number of reads involved in the assembly | 1,362,260 |
Total number of unique sequences | 52,761 |
Total number of contigs | 48,800 |
Total number of singletons | 3,961 |
Average unigenes size | 798 bp |
N50 contig size | 792 bp |
Through the BLASTx-BLASTn sequential homology search, nearly half (47.7%) of the unigenes could be annotated. When all unique transcripts were aligned against the Swiss-Prot database using BLASTx, a total of 17,779 (33.7%) unique transcripts yielded one or more significant hits. Table 2 lists the characteristics of the top 20 most abundant ESTs (the sequences are in File S1). Besides some housekeeping high-abundant genes, some genes involved in the reproduction (vitellogenin), defence (transferrin), energy metabolism (COX1), detoxification enzyme (CYP4G19) and allergenic proteins also were expressed at high levels. The number of identified genes related to some important physiological functions in the German cockroach is shown in Table 3.
Table 2. Summary of top 20 abundant assembled unigenes from the German cockroach transcriptome.
Unigene ID | Length (bp) | Top Blast hit | Identity (%) |
Contig6820 | 4019 | 18S ribosomal RNA, Blattella germanica | 99 |
Contig4068 | 6792 | Vitellogenin-2, B. germanica | 99 |
unigene_rep_c6381 | 887 | NADH dehydrogenase subunit 1, B. germanica | 100 |
Contig3091 | 2293 | Transferrin, Blaberus discoidalis | 82 |
Contig3072 | 4114 | Myosin heavy chain, Musca domestica | 91 |
Contig6443 | 1518 | Cytochrome c oxidase subunit 1 (COX1), B. germanica | 96 |
Contig3066 | 1053 | Arginine kinase, B. germanica | 99 |
Contig3115 | 7089 | Apolipophorins, Locusta migratoria | 47 |
Contig2345 | 1323 | Elongation factor 1α (EF-1α), Cryptocercus punctulatus | 98 |
Contig1101 | 1446 | α-Amylase, B. germanica | 76 |
Contig946 | 746 | Tropomyosin-2, Coptotermes formosanus | 96 |
Contig61 | 1120 | β-actin, Acyrthosiphon pisum | 100 |
Contig4872 | 2616 | Elongation factor 2 (EF-2), Schistocerca gregaria | 99 |
Contig594 | 483 | Allergen Bla g 8, B. germanica | 100 |
Contig848 | 996 | Troponin T (TnT), C. formosanus | 93 |
Contig1104 | 1608 | Pyruvate kinase, Tribolium castaneum | 80 |
Contig3092 | 1032 | Aspartic protease Bla g 2, B. germanica | 80 |
Contig611 | 1635 | Cytochrome P450 CYP4G19, B. germanica | 100 |
Contig3123 | 715 | ATP-dependent RNA helicase p62, T. castaneum | 85 |
Contig3084 | 2631 | Paramyosin, Megachile rotundata | 84 |
Table 3. Genes related to important physiological functions.
Functional genes | No. of unigenes | Functional genes | No. of unigenes |
Detoxification | α-amylase | 46 | |
Cytochrome P450 | 163 | α-glucosidase (maltase) | 5 |
GSTs | 64 | β-glucosidase | 21 |
CarE | 12 | Lipase | 41 |
ATP-binding cassette | 19 | Immunity and defence | |
UDP glycosyltransferases | 5 | β-glucanase | 18 |
Insecticide targets | Lectin-like protein | 115 | |
Acetylcholinesterase | 3 | Peritrophic membrane biosynthesis and metabolization | |
GABA receptor | 2 | Chitinase | 37 |
Nicotinic acetylcholine receptor | 5 | Chitin synthase | 5 |
Sodium channel | 6 | Chitin deacetylase | 3 |
Glutamate receptor | 12 | Peritrophin (mucin)-like | 19 |
Digestion | Olfactory reception | ||
Serine proteinase all types | 19 | Odorant-binding protein (OBP) | 15 |
Cysteine proteinase all types | 10 | Chemosensory protein (CSP) | 12 |
Carboxypeptidase all types | 53 | Odorant receptor (OR) | 2 |
Aminopeptidase all types | 47 | Gustatory reception | |
Dipeptidyl-peptidase | 2 | Gustatory receptor (GR) | 4 |
Functional classifications of annotated ESTs
GO analysis was conducted using BLAST2GO and WEGO programs. Of the 52,761 unigenes, 11,383 could be assigned into 48 functional groups (Figure 2) in three categories. The three categories were further divided into over 100 sub-categories (Figure S1). Among them, cell and cell part in the cellular component, hydrolase and nucleotide binding in the molecular function, cellular processes and metabolic processes in the biological processes represented the major sub-categories. The smallest groups were the metallochaperone in the molecular function category and the virion part in the cellular component. Some unigenes were assigned to multiple categories of GO terms, while others could not be assigned to a given GO term. The biological process terms were associated predominantly with cellular processes such as proteolysis, carbohydrate metabolic processes and oxidation reduction utilization. Similar composition and distribution of unigenes assigned by GO terms have been reported in transcriptomic description from other insects [15], [20], [40], [41].
All unique transcripts were also searched against the KOG database for functional prediction and classification. With some of these unigenes no appropriate KOG annotation, 16,612 KOG annotations were produced and could be classified into 25 molecular families (Figure 3). Among the KOG classifications, the cluster of general function (20.4%) was the largest, followed by translation and signal transduction mechanisms (10.5%), and posttranslational modification, protein turnover, and chaperones (8.5%). The three smallest groups were nuclear structure (0.57%), defense mechanisms (0.53%) and cell motility (0.33%) respectively.
Among all the unigenes, 10,402 sequences with an enzyme classification (EC) number were mapped into 190 KEGG pathways in total (Table S2). Among the pathways identified, the metabolic pathways were found to be the most active, which is similar to the pattern observe in N. lugens [24].
Identification of simple sequence repeats (SSRs) loci
SSRs, also known as microsatellites, are tandem repeated motifs of 1–6 bases and serve as the most important molecular markers in population and conservation genetics, molecular epidemiology and pathology, and gene mapping. By screening all the unigenes, 3601 SSRs loci with di-, tri-, tetra- and penta-nucleotide repeats were identified. Among them, trinucleotide repeats were the most abundant (60.7%), followed by dinucleotide repeats (24.0%), tetranucleotide (13.3%) and pentanucleotide repeats (2.0%). The most frequent motifs were (AAT)n (6.39%) and (TAT)n (5.69%). These SSRs could represent a valuable biomarker resource of B. germanica. However, all these putative SSR markers need to be validated to eliminate possible false positives and sequencing errors.
Transcripts involved in systematic RNA interference pathway
The RNAi process has been fully investigated in D. melanogaster and Caenorhabditis elegans. Previous studies suggested that systematic RNAi is very efficient in cockroach functional gene study [42]. Diverse proteins such as SID-1 and scavenger receptors (SRs), have been reported to be involved in RNAi process. SID-1 is a protein that transports dsRNA into cells as observed in C. elegans; however, no SID-1 orthologue was found in the present transcriptome dataset or other Dipteran insects [43]. Over 90% of the dsRNA uptaken into S2 cells in Drosophila is initiated by two SRs, including SR-CI and the scavenger receptor Eater [44]. Gene orthologous to SR-CI was absent herein, and unigene_c62 was identified as Eater, similar to what found in the fruit fly, Bactrocera dorsalis [45]. Whether unigene_c62 participates in the uptake of dsRNA in B. germanica remains to be investigated.
In general, the dsRNA or short hairpin RNA incorporated into cells is processed into small interfering RNA (siRNA) or microRNA (miRNA) by two distinct Dicer complexes (Dicer-1 and Dicer-2), respectively. Dicer-1 is ATP-independent and prefers to process the stem-loop precursor of miRNA, while Dicer-2 favors long dsRNA as its ideal substrate, and requires ATP hydrolysis for efficient siRNA production [46]. R2D2 can form the Dicer-2/R2D2 complex with Dicer-2, and bind to siRNA to enhance sequence specific messenger RNA degradation mediated by the RNA-initiated silencing complex (RISC). In Drosophila, R2D2 acts as a bridge between the initiation and effector steps of the RNAi pathway by facilitating siRNA passage from Dicer to RISC [47]. In the present study, we found four unigenes homologous to two Dicer genes of the German cockroach which were fully sequenced with known function [48], while R2D2 lost in the unigene dataset is probably due to the limitation of sequencing coverage.
The Argonaute 2 (AGO2) has been reported to be another main component of RISC complex involved in cleavage of siRNA-directed mRNA and degradation of the passenger strand in the siRNA duplex [49]. We found two Argonaute genes, AGO1 (unigene_c2208) and AGO2 (unigene_c24957), which show high homology to the counterparts of T. castaneum (XM_966202) and Acyrthosiphon pisum (XM_001944817). Further molecular cloning and functional analyses of these genes may shed light on their roles in the systemic RNAi pathway in the German cockroach.
Transcripts encoding detoxification enzymes and insecticide targets
German cockroach has been documented to evolve resistance to insecticide rapidly [50]. The known mechanisms underlying insecticide resistance in the German cockroach include decreased penetration [50], increased detoxification [51], target insensitivity [52] and bait aversion [53]. To screen genes that may evolve insecticide resistance, we mined the current transcriptomic data in order to identify unigenes encoding insecticide targets or detoxification enzymes. As shown in Table 3, a number of sequences homologous to detoxification enzymes including carboxylesterase (CarE), glutathione S-transferase (GST), cytochrome P450 and insecticide targets were identified. The mean lengths of these unigenes ranged from 387 bp to 985 bp leading to a relatively reliable annotation.
A total of 163 P450-like transcripts with a size of more than 600 bp were identified and curated manually. This gene number fell within the range of insects that their whole genomes were sequenced [9], covering the 13 P450 ESTs previously deposited in GenBank. Based on the closest BLAST hits in the NCBI nr database, these P450 unigenes were tentatively assigned to appropriate CYP families and clades, containing representatives of all the 4 main insect P450 clans (CYP2, CYP3,CYP4 and mitochondrial). CYP3 ranked as the largest clan, consisting of 45 members belonged to the CYP6 family and 28 genes to CYP9. Members from CYP3 clan appear to share the characteristics of environmental response genes, such as very high diversity and rapid rates of evolution [54]. The CYP4 clan included 39 P450s from the CYP4 family. The remainder belonged to the mitochondrial (15 ones) and CYP2 (22 ones) clan, which might be involved in the ecdysteroid metabolism pathway (CYP301 family) and essential physiological function (CYP303–305 and CYP15 families) respectively. The observation that the members of CYP4, CYP6 and CYP9 families together account for 74.2% of the total P450s indicates that the German cockroach, similar to other omnivorous insects, arms itself with potent capacity of metabolizing various xenobiotics.
A total of 64 GST-related EST sequences were identified in our database. However, only 12 contigs possessing a characteristic motif of CarE were found, which are relatively fewer than those found in other insects. In addition, a number of contigs encoding insecticide target proteins were also identified in the transcriptome, including acetylcholinesterase (AChE) (3 unigenes), nicotinic acetyl choline receptor subunits (nAChRs) (2), gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) receptor (2), glutamate receptor (12) and sodium channel (6).
Transcripts involved in innate immunity
Insects have powerful innate immunity against many pathogens [29]. Cockroaches encounter various types of infectious agents, because they live under diverse unsanitary and unhygienic milieus. It is logical to believe that cockroaches have developed effective innate immunity of protecting themselves against pathogenic microorganisms. Production of diverse antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) plays critical roles in insect immunity [55]. The AMPs are regulated by a balance between two signaling pathways involving the Toll pathway that is activated mainly by fungi and Gram-positive bacteria, and the Immune deficiency (Imd) pathway that is activated mainly by Gram-negative bacteria. Toll and Imd cascades also control the majority of the genes regulated by microbial infection in addition to AMP genes, and are involved in nearly all known Drosophila innate immune reactions [56]. Previous studies suggest that the brain lysates, fat body or haemolymph of American cockroaches (Periplaneta americana) have remarkable antimicrobial activity against different bacteria including Staphylococcus aureus, MRSA (Gram-positive methicillin-resistant S. aureus), S. epidermidis and a neuropathogenic Escherichia coli K1 [55].
Dozens of genes identified in our transcriptome dataset may contribute to immune response in B. germanica (Table 4), including GNBP, PGRP (Peptidoglycan recognition proteins), SR-b/c, Toll-like receptors, Imd (Immune deficiency gene), Lipopolysaccharide-binding protein (LPS-bp), Iap (Inhibitor of apoptosis), MAPK (mitogen-activated protein kinase), prophenoloxidase, lysozymes, galectin, cathepsins, transferrins, defensins, diptericins and serpins. Most of them have a counterpart in other insects such as Aedes aegypti [18], Musca domestica [20] and Nilaparvata lugens [24]. These genes have been documented to play important roles as immune effect factors against possible pathogenic bacteria [55]–[57].
Table 4. Genes related to innate immunity.
Tentative annotation | Description | No. of unigenes |
GNBP | Gram negative bacteria binding protein | 4 |
PGRP | Peptidoglycan recognition protein | 15 |
SR-b/c | Scavenger receptor which participates in the removal of many foreign substances such as gram (+/−) bacteria | 6 |
Toll-like receptor | Key receptor in Toll pathway | 16 |
Imd | Immune deficiency gene encoding death domain-containing protein | 3 |
LPS-bp | Lipopolysaccharide-binding protein | 21 |
Iap | Inhibitor of apoptosis | 4 |
MAPK | Mitogen-activated protein kinase | 2 |
Prophenoloxidase | Activate the phenoloxidase involved in melanization of pathogens and damaged tissues | 2 |
Lysozyme | Break the bonds between polysaccharides in peptidoglycan on the bacterial cell walls | 8 |
Galectin | Function in insect innate immune as a pattern-recognition protein | 3 |
Cathepsin | Participate in molting, tissue remodeling, embryogenesis and immune evasion | 32 |
Transferrin | An iron transporter function as antibiotic agent, vitellogenin, and juvenile hormone regulated protein | 20 |
Defensin | Function as host defense peptide against bacteria, fungi and viruses. | 2 |
Diptericin | A novel anti-bacterial peptide | 4 |
Serpin | Regulate the innate immune pathway such as Toll by inhibition of serine proteases | 47 |
Transcripts involved in olfactory and gustatory perception
We identified gene families that have been implicated in chemosensory reception (Table 3) including odorant binding proteins (OBPs), chemosensory proteins (CSPs), odorant receptors (ORs) and gustatory receptors (GRs). The detailed EST sequences are present in File S1.
OBPs have been proposed to capture and transport hydrophobic chemicals from air to ORs in the lymph of sensory hairs. Fourteen putative OBP transcripts were identified in this study. The number of OBPs identified here was far less than that in D. melanogaster (51) [58], Bombyx mori (44) [59], Anopheles gambiae (69) [60], Aedes aegypti (111) [60] and Culex quinquefasciatus (109) [60]. We assume that there are still other unidentified OBPs in the German cockroach, although relatively fewer genes encoding OBPs (19 and 5, respectively) were identified in the fire ant Solenopsis invicta [61] and the body louse P. humanus [62] genomes. An alignment of the deduced German cockroach OBPs (Figure 4A) revealed the most striking six conserved cysteine residues (the first cysteine C1 is absent because of the restriction of assembled unigenes lengths), which are present in the characteristic positions in all known insect OBPs.
CSPs exhibit an expression in the antenna similar to OBPs, and may perform tasks ranging from ontogeny to colony level regulation [63]. CSPs are characterized by only 4 conserved cysteines forming two non-interlocked disulfide bridges, whereas 6 conserved cysteines are paired in three interlocked disulphide bridges in OBPs [64]. Therefore, CSPs may represent a new class of soluble carrier proteins involved in insect chemoreception. The CSP gene family varies in sizes across arthropods. For example, the tick Ixodes scapularis has 1 CSP gene, D. melanogaster has 4, and larger known repertoires are found in T. castaneum (19 genes), B. mori (22 genes) and S. invicta (21 genes) [65]. No CSPs from the German cockroach have been previously reported. We identified a total of 12 CSP-coding gene fragments in the present study, with 8 CSPs being homologous to CSP7 and CSP18 from T. castaneum. The four CSPs with a long coding region identified in the study (Figure 4B) contained the typical four-cysteine signature and a common cysteine sequence motif of C1-X6-8-C2-X16-21-C3-X2-C4 of insect CSPs [66].
In order to gain insight of the relationships between the annotated OBPs/CSPs and their counterparts from other insects, we carried out a phylogenetic analysis using putative amino acid sequences. The resultant tree constructed by the neighbor-joining method suggests that the 7 identified German cockroach OBPs were clustered into a group comprising related proteins of the other two cockroach species (P. Americana and Rhyparobia Maderae) and Sitodiplosis mosellana (orange wheat blossom midge), whereas the Contig 535 was dispersed at the bottom of the tree (Figure 5A). Consistent with their diverse functions, OBPs have a high sequence divergence (20%–30% of amino acid identity, see OBPs alignment in supporting information) [60], [67]. Insect OBPs are likely to be involved in broader physiological functions, not restricted to olfaction [68]. In contrast, CSPs from diverse insect species share high amino acid identities (about 50%–55%, Figure 5B), supporting the view that insect CSPs are highly conserved even across very distant species, and implying important roles they might play in insect physiology [69].
ORs are central to odorant detection in insects. Because of their high sequence variability, the most common method to identify OR-coding genes is to analyze genomic sequence databases [70]. Only 2 OR unigenes were annotated in this transcriptome, far fewer than those from other insects.
It has been reported that Drosophila contains a family of 60 gustatory receptor (GR) genes [71]. We identified 4 transcripts encoding homologous gustatory receptor in the cockroach. Two of them (unigene c5971 and unigene rep c30027) with a size of over 500 bp were exploited to analyze their phylogeny. As shown in Figure 6A, unigene c5971 showed homology to several other GRs from different species, such as Gr64f from D. melanogaster. Gr64f and other seven proteins (Gr5a, Gr61a and Gr64a–f) have been identified as sugar receptors (SRs) in D. melanogaster [72]. Drosophila sugar receptors function as multimers, and Gr64f is required broadly as a co-receptor for the detection of sugars [73]. We propose that c5971 gene identified in this study may also be involved in sugar perception of German cockroach. Unigene rep c30027 similarly showed close evolutionary distances with Gr63a and Gr21a (Figure 6B), which are co-expressed in CO2-responsive neurons and play an important role in the fruit fly food-seeking [74], suggesting the involvement of unigene rep c30027 in food seeking in the cockroach. Conservation of these GR sequences between fairly diverged insect species likely reflects indispensable gustatory sensitivities to a particular chemical or set of chemicals, a property that allows us to speculate their potential function.
Conclusions
This study provides a new genetic data resource helpful for further comprehensive studies on the German cockroach. The information presented here will be useful to improve our understanding about the molecular mechanisms of cockroach immunity, insecticide resistance, chemoreception and gene regulation.
Supporting Information
Funding Statement
This study was supported by the grants from China Postdoctoral Science Foundation (2013M530727), Beijing Municipal Postdoctoral Scientific Research Foundation (2013ZZ-94) and Public Welfare Industry Scientific Research Foundation of National General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine (201310255-02). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.
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