Genome sequence of the small brown planthopper, <i>Laodelphax striatellus</i>

Junjie Zhu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Feng Jiang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Xianhui Wang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Pengcheng Yang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Yan‐Yuan Bao(State Key Laboratory of Rice Biology), Wan Zhao(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Wei Wang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Hong Lü(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Qianshuo Wang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Na Cui(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Jìng Li(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Xiaofang Chen(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Lan Luo(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Jinting Yu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Le Kang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Feng Cui(Chinese Academy of Sciences)
GigaScience
November 10, 2017
Cited by 137Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Background: Laodelphax striatellus Fallén (Hemiptera: Delphacidae) is one of the most destructive rice pests. L. striatellus is different from 2 other rice planthoppers with a released genome sequence, Sogatella furcifera and Nilaparvata lugens, in many biological characteristics, such as host range, dispersal capacity, and vectoring plant viruses. Deciphering the genome of L. striatellus will further the understanding of the genetic basis of the biological differences among the 3 rice planthoppers. Findings: A total of 190 Gb of Illumina data and 32.4 Gb of Pacbio data were generated and used to assemble a high-quality L. striatellus genome sequence, which is 541 Mb in length and has a contig N50 of 118 Kb and a scaffold N50 of 1.08 Mb. Annotated repetitive elements account for 25.7% of the genome. A total of 17 736 protein-coding genes were annotated, capturing 97.6% and 98% of the BUSCO eukaryote and arthropoda genes, respectively. Compared with N. lugens and S. furcifera, L. striatellus has the smallest genome and the lowest gene number. Gene family expansion and transcriptomic analyses provided hints to the genomic basis of the differences in important traits such as host range, migratory habit, and plant virus transmission between L. striatellus and the other 2 planthoppers. Conclusions: We report a high-quality genome assembly of L. striatellus, which is an important genomic resource not only for the study of the biology of L. striatellus and its interactions with plant hosts and plant viruses, but also for comparison with other planthoppers.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis