The Colorado potato beetle ( (Say)) can cause extensive damage to agricultural crops worldwide and is a significant insect pest. This insect is notorious for its ability to evade various strategies deployed to control its spread and is known for its relative ease in developing resistance against different insecticides. Various molecular levers are leveraged by for this resistance to occur, and a complete picture of the genes involved in this process is lacking.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMitochondria have been suggested to be paramount for temperature adaptation in insects. Considering the large range of environments colonized by this taxon, we hypothesized that species surviving large temperature changes would be those with the most flexible mitochondria. We thus investigated the responses of mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) to temperature in three flying insects: the honeybee (), the fruit fly () and the Colorado potato beetle ().
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe Colorado potato beetle (Leptinotarsa decemlineata (Say)) is an insect that can adapt to various challenges, including temperature fluctuations or select insecticide treatments. This pest is also an ongoing threat to the potato industry. Small noncoding RNAs such as miRNAs, which can control posttranscriptionally the expression of various genes, and piRNAs, which can notably impact mRNA turnover, are modulated in insects under different conditions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVarious approaches based on RNA interference (RNAi) have garnered significant attention in the field of insect pest management in recent years. For example, the use of double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) has notably been investigated to target transcripts of interest with relevance to insecticide resistance in multiple pests and has emerged as a potential tool to be deployed in agricultural fields in the near future. A careful characterization of a given dsRNA in a laboratory setting, including the assessment of dsRNA-mediated molecular and phenotypical changes observed in the targeted pest upon dsRNA exposure, is nevertheless essential prior to its use in field-based study.
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