Project description:This a reciprocal transplant experiment. Two hebivorous lepidoptera species (Ostrinia nubilalis and Ostrinia scapulalis) have been fed either their preferred plant (corn for O.nubilalis and Mugwort for O. scapulalis) or the reciprocal plant. At 4th larval instar, RNA was extracted from whole larvae, size selected to enrich in small RNAs and sequenced by Illumina single-end 50bp.
Project description:We present a draft genome assembly with a de novo prediction and automated functional annotation of coding genes, and a reference transcriptome of the Adzuki bean borer, Ostrinia scapulalis, based on RNA sequencing of various tissues and developmental stages. The genome assembly spans 419?Mb, has a GC content of 37.4% and includes 26,120 predicted coding genes. The reference transcriptome holds 33,080 unigenes and contains a high proportion of a set of genes conserved in eukaryotes and arthropods, used as quality assessment of the reconstructed transcripts. The new genomic and transcriptomic data presented here significantly enrich the public sequence databases for the Crambidae and Lepidoptera, and represent useful resources for future researches related to the evolution and the adaptation of phytophagous moths. The genome and transcriptome assemblies have been deposited and made accessible via a NCBI BioProject (id PRJNA390510) and the LepidoDB database (http://bipaa.genouest.org/sp/ostrinia_scapulalis/).
Project description:The goals of this study are to obtain the transcriptome profiling (RNA-seq) of different developmental stages and tissues in Ostrinia furnacalis. Methods: O. furnacalis embryos were collected less than 12 h post oviposition. 1st, 3rd and 5th instar of the Asian corn borer, which represents the newly hatched larvae, the middle stage of larvae and the mature larvae, was harvested for subsequent experiments. Pupae and adults were grouped into females and males, then female and male samples were mixed at the ratio of 1:1. The 3rd instar larvae were anesthetized on an ice plate for tissue extraction. The midgut, fat body and silk gland were isolated. All these samples were generated by deep sequencing, in triplicate, using Illumina NovaSeq 6000. The sequence reads that passed quality filters were analyzed at the transcript isoform level with two methods: Burrows–Wheeler Aligner (BWA) followed by ANOVA (ANOVA) and TopHat followed by Cufflinks. Results: We obtained the transcriptome profiling (RNA-seq) of different developmental stages and tissues in Ostrinia furnacalis Conclusions: Our study representsa detailed analysis of different developmental stages and tissues in Ostrinia furnacalis