Genomes of the rice pest brown planthopper and its endosymbionts reveal complex complementary contributions for host adaptation

Jian Xue(China National Rice Research Institute), Xin Zhou(BGI Group (China)), Chuan‐Xi Zhang(China National Rice Research Institute), Lili Yu(BGI Group (China)), Haiwei Fan(China National Rice Research Institute), Zhuo Wang(BGI Group (China)), Hai‐Jun Xu(China National Rice Research Institute), Yu Xi(China National Rice Research Institute), Zeng‐Rong Zhu(China National Rice Research Institute), Wenwu Zhou(China National Rice Research Institute), Peng-Lu Pan(China National Rice Research Institute), Baoling Li(China National Rice Research Institute), John K. Colbourne(University of Birmingham), Hiroaki Noda(Institute of Agrobiological Sciences), Yoshitaka Suetsugu(Institute of Agrobiological Sciences), Tetsuya Kobayashi(Institute of Agrobiological Sciences), Yuan Zheng(BGI Group (China)), Shanlin Liu(BGI Group (China)), Rui Zhang(BGI Group (China)), Yang Liu(BGI Group (China)), Yadan Luo(BGI Group (China)), Dongming Fang(BGI Group (China)), Yan Chen(BGI Group (China)), Dongliang Zhan(BGI Group (China)), Xiaodan Lv(BGI Group (China)), Yue Cai(BGI Group (China)), Zhaobao Wang(BGI Group (China)), Hai‐Jian Huang(China National Rice Research Institute), Ruolin Cheng(China National Rice Research Institute), Xuechao Zhang(China National Rice Research Institute), Yi-Han Lou(China National Rice Research Institute), Bing Yu(China National Rice Research Institute), Ji‐Chong Zhuo(China National Rice Research Institute), Yuxuan Ye(China National Rice Research Institute), Wenqing Zhang(Sun Yat-sen University), Zhicheng Shen(China National Rice Research Institute), Huanming Yang(BGI Group (China)), Jian Wang(BGI Group (China)), Jun Wang(BGI Group (China)), Yan‐Yuan Bao(China National Rice Research Institute), Jiaan Cheng(China National Rice Research Institute)
Genome biology
December 3, 2014
Cited by 455Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: The brown planthopper, Nilaparvata lugens, the most destructive pest of rice, is a typical monophagous herbivore that feeds exclusively on rice sap, which migrates over long distances. Outbreaks of it have re-occurred approximately every three years in Asia. It has also been used as a model system for ecological studies and for developing effective pest management. To better understand how a monophagous sap-sucking arthropod herbivore has adapted to its exclusive host selection and to provide insights to improve pest control, we analyzed the genomes of the brown planthopper and its two endosymbionts. RESULTS: We describe the 1.14 gigabase planthopper draft genome and the genomes of two microbial endosymbionts that permit the planthopper to forage exclusively on rice fields. Only 40.8% of the 27,571 identified Nilaparvata protein coding genes have detectable shared homology with the proteomes of the other 14 arthropods included in this study, reflecting large-scale gene losses including in evolutionarily conserved gene families and biochemical pathways. These unique genomic features are functionally associated with the animal's exclusive plant host selection. Genes missing from the insect in conserved biochemical pathways that are essential for its survival on the nutritionally imbalanced sap diet are present in the genomes of its microbial endosymbionts, which have evolved to complement the mutualistic nutritional needs of the host. CONCLUSIONS: Our study reveals a series of complex adaptations of the brown planthopper involving a variety of biological processes, that result in its highly destructive impact on the exclusive host rice. All these findings highlight potential directions for effective pest control of the planthopper.


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