1. Optimal dsRNA Concentration for RNA Interference in Asian Citrus Psyllid.
- Author
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Saberi, Esmaeil, Mondal, Mosharrof, Paredes-Montero, Jorge R., Nawaz, Kiran, Brown, Judith K., and Qureshi, Jawwad A.
- Subjects
CITRUS greening disease ,RNA interference ,SMALL interfering RNA ,DOUBLE-stranded RNA ,CANDIDATUS liberibacter asiaticus ,CITRUS - Abstract
Simple Summary: The Asian citrus psyllid is an insect pest of citrus trees that transmits the causal agent of huanglongbing disease. Double-stranded RNA molecules trigger RNA interference (RNAi), a naturally occurring process in eukaryotes that modulates the expression of genes involved in host innate immunity. Use of dsRNA biopesticides offers an alternative to traditional insecticides. In this study, the concentration of dsRNA required to achieve optimal knockdown and mortality for screening exogenous dsRNA by oral delivery was 200 ng/μL. Implementing this pre-established dsRNA regime for laboratory screening of ACP RNAi will enable high-throughput discovery of dsRNA targets and aid in evaluating RNAi biopesticide formulations. Establishing a working threshold can also prevent the use of excessive amounts of dsRNA, which is expensive, can negatively influence RNAi efficiency, and potentially trigger off-target effects. The Asian citrus psyllid (ACP) is a citrus pest and insect vector of "Candidatus Liberibacter asiaticus", the causal agent of citrus greening disease. Double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) biopesticides that trigger RNA interference (RNAi) offer an alternative to traditional insecticides. Standardized laboratory screening of dsRNA requires establishing the minimal effective concentration(s) that result in effective RNAi "penetrance" and trigger RNAi, resulting in one or more measurable phenotypes, herein, significant gene knockdown and the potential for mortality. In this study, knockdown was evaluated for a range of dsRNA concentrations of three ACP candidate genes, clathrin heavy chain (CHC), vacuolar ATPase subunit A (vATPase-A), and sucrose non-fermenting protein 7 (Snf7). Gene knockdown was quantified for ACP teneral adults and 3rd instar nymphs allowed a 48 h ingestion-access period (IAP) on 10, 50,100, 200, and 500 ng/µL dsRNA dissolved in 20% sucrose followed by a 5-day post-IAP on orange jasmine shoots. Significant gene knockdown (p < 0.05) in ACP third instar nymphs and adults ranged from 12–34% and 18–39%, 5 days post-IAP on dsRNA at 10–500 and 100–500 ng/µL, respectively. The threshold concentration beyond which no significant gene knockdown and adult mortality was observed post-48 h IAP and 10-day IAP, respectively, was determined as 200 ng/µL, a concentration indicative of optimal RNAi penetrance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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