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Transcriptome Sequencing of and Microarray Development for a Helicoverpa zea Cell Line to Investigate In Vitro Insect Cell-Baculovirus Interactions

The Heliothine insect complex contains some of the most destructive pests of agricultural crops worldwide, including the closely related Helicoverpa zea and H. armigera. Biological control using baculoviruses is practiced at a moderate level worldwide. In order to enable more wide spread use, a bett...

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Autores principales: Nguyen, Quan, Palfreyman, Robin W., Chan, Leslie C. L., Reid, Steven, Nielsen, Lars K.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3356360/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22629315
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0036324
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author Nguyen, Quan
Palfreyman, Robin W.
Chan, Leslie C. L.
Reid, Steven
Nielsen, Lars K.
author_facet Nguyen, Quan
Palfreyman, Robin W.
Chan, Leslie C. L.
Reid, Steven
Nielsen, Lars K.
author_sort Nguyen, Quan
collection PubMed
description The Heliothine insect complex contains some of the most destructive pests of agricultural crops worldwide, including the closely related Helicoverpa zea and H. armigera. Biological control using baculoviruses is practiced at a moderate level worldwide. In order to enable more wide spread use, a better understanding of cell-virus interactions is required. While many baculoviruses have been sequenced, none of the Heliothine insect genomes have been available. In this study, we sequenced, assembled and functionally annotated 29,586 transcripts from cultured H. zea cells using Illumina 100 bps and paired-end transcriptome sequencing (RNA-seq). The transcript sequences had high assembly coverage (64.5 times). 23,401 sequences had putative protein functions, and over 13,000 sequences had high similarities to available sequences in other insect species. The sequence database was estimated to cover at least 85% of all H. zea genes. The sequences were used to construct a microarray, which was evaluated on the infection of H. zea cells with H. Armigera single-capsid nucleopolyhedrovirus (HearNPV). The analysis revealed that up-regulation of apoptosis genes is the main cellular response in the early infection phase (18 hours post infection), while genes linked to four major immunological signalling pathways (Toll, IMD, Jak-STAT and JNK) were down-regulated. Only small changes (generally downwards) were observed for central carbon metabolism. The transcriptome and microarray platform developed in this study represent a greatly expanded resource base for H. zea insect- HearNPV interaction studies, in which key cellular pathways such as those for metabolism, immune response, transcription and replication have been identified. This resource will be used to develop better cell culture-based virus production processes, and more generally to investigate the molecular basis of host range and susceptibility, virus infectivity and virulence, and the ecology and evolution of baculoviruses.
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spelling pubmed-33563602012-05-24 Transcriptome Sequencing of and Microarray Development for a Helicoverpa zea Cell Line to Investigate In Vitro Insect Cell-Baculovirus Interactions Nguyen, Quan Palfreyman, Robin W. Chan, Leslie C. L. Reid, Steven Nielsen, Lars K. PLoS One Research Article The Heliothine insect complex contains some of the most destructive pests of agricultural crops worldwide, including the closely related Helicoverpa zea and H. armigera. Biological control using baculoviruses is practiced at a moderate level worldwide. In order to enable more wide spread use, a better understanding of cell-virus interactions is required. While many baculoviruses have been sequenced, none of the Heliothine insect genomes have been available. In this study, we sequenced, assembled and functionally annotated 29,586 transcripts from cultured H. zea cells using Illumina 100 bps and paired-end transcriptome sequencing (RNA-seq). The transcript sequences had high assembly coverage (64.5 times). 23,401 sequences had putative protein functions, and over 13,000 sequences had high similarities to available sequences in other insect species. The sequence database was estimated to cover at least 85% of all H. zea genes. The sequences were used to construct a microarray, which was evaluated on the infection of H. zea cells with H. Armigera single-capsid nucleopolyhedrovirus (HearNPV). The analysis revealed that up-regulation of apoptosis genes is the main cellular response in the early infection phase (18 hours post infection), while genes linked to four major immunological signalling pathways (Toll, IMD, Jak-STAT and JNK) were down-regulated. Only small changes (generally downwards) were observed for central carbon metabolism. The transcriptome and microarray platform developed in this study represent a greatly expanded resource base for H. zea insect- HearNPV interaction studies, in which key cellular pathways such as those for metabolism, immune response, transcription and replication have been identified. This resource will be used to develop better cell culture-based virus production processes, and more generally to investigate the molecular basis of host range and susceptibility, virus infectivity and virulence, and the ecology and evolution of baculoviruses. Public Library of Science 2012-05-18 /pmc/articles/PMC3356360/ /pubmed/22629315 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0036324 Text en Nguyen et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Nguyen, Quan
Palfreyman, Robin W.
Chan, Leslie C. L.
Reid, Steven
Nielsen, Lars K.
Transcriptome Sequencing of and Microarray Development for a Helicoverpa zea Cell Line to Investigate In Vitro Insect Cell-Baculovirus Interactions
title Transcriptome Sequencing of and Microarray Development for a Helicoverpa zea Cell Line to Investigate In Vitro Insect Cell-Baculovirus Interactions
title_full Transcriptome Sequencing of and Microarray Development for a Helicoverpa zea Cell Line to Investigate In Vitro Insect Cell-Baculovirus Interactions
title_fullStr Transcriptome Sequencing of and Microarray Development for a Helicoverpa zea Cell Line to Investigate In Vitro Insect Cell-Baculovirus Interactions
title_full_unstemmed Transcriptome Sequencing of and Microarray Development for a Helicoverpa zea Cell Line to Investigate In Vitro Insect Cell-Baculovirus Interactions
title_short Transcriptome Sequencing of and Microarray Development for a Helicoverpa zea Cell Line to Investigate In Vitro Insect Cell-Baculovirus Interactions
title_sort transcriptome sequencing of and microarray development for a helicoverpa zea cell line to investigate in vitro insect cell-baculovirus interactions
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3356360/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22629315
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0036324
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