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Novel molecular approach to define pest species status and tritrophic interactions from historical Bemisia specimens
Authors
A Dinsdale
A Polaszek
+56 more
A Polaszek
A Polaszek
AK Dubey
B-L Qiu
B-L Qiu
C Simon
D Gotzek
DC Oliveira
DCSG Oliveira
E Chiel
F Vavre
G Gueguen
GH Corbett
H Li
H Li
HL Ji
J Xu
JC Brownlie
K Katoh
K Lagesen
KC Rowe
KDE Everett
KM Oliver
LA Mound
LM Boykin
LM Boykin
LM Russell
M Bernt
M Dowton
M Mao
MJTN Timmermans
MM Tin
MS Hoddle
MZ Ahmed
NW Schaad
O Bahar
P Wang
PA Rollat-Farnier
PJ Barro De
Q Rao
Q Su
Q Su
RG Shatters Jr.
S Abd-Rabou
S Ghosh
S Ueda
SE Masta
SN Song
SS Liu
SS Liu
VN Rao
WT Tay
WT Tay
WT Tay
XL Bing
Y Watanabe
Publication date
27 March 2017
Publisher
'Springer Science and Business Media LLC'
Doi
Abstract
Museum specimens represent valuable genomic resources for understanding host-endosymbiont/parasitoid evolutionary relationships, resolving species complexes and nomenclatural problems. However, museum collections suffer DNA degradation, making them challenging for molecular-based studies. Here, the mitogenomes of a single 1912 Sri Lankan Bemisia emiliae cotype puparium, and of a 1942 Japanese Bemisia puparium are characterised using a Next-Generation Sequencing approach. Whiteflies are small sap-sucking insects including B. tabaci pest species complex. Bemisia emiliae’s draft mitogenome showed a high degree of homology with published B. tabaci mitogenomes, and exhibited 98–100% partial mitochondrial DNA Cytochrome Oxidase I (mtCOI) gene identity with the B. tabaci species known as Asia II-7. The partial mtCOI gene of the Japanese specimen shared 99% sequence identity with the Bemisia ‘JpL’ genetic group. Metagenomic analysis identified bacterial sequences in both Bemisia specimens, while hymenopteran sequences were also identified in the Japanese Bemisia puparium, including complete mtCOI and rRNA genes, and various partial mtDNA genes. At 88–90% mtCOI sequence identity to Aphelinidae wasps, we concluded that the 1942 Bemisia nymph was parasitized by an Eretmocerus parasitoid wasp. Our approach enables the characterisation of genomes and associated metagenomic communities of museum specimens using 1.5 ng gDNA, and to infer historical tritrophic relationships in Bemisia whiteflies.© The Author(s) 2017. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons license, unless indicated otherwise in the credit line; if the material is not included under the Creative Commons license, users will need to obtain permission from the license holder to reproduce the material. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/. The attached file is the published pdf
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info:doi/10.1038%2Fs41598-017-...
Last time updated on 02/01/2020