AI Article Synopsis

  • Female insects experience significant physiological and behavioral changes after mating, receiving sperm and a complex mixture of proteins from males that affect various reproductive functions.
  • In the Mexican fruit fly, mating boosts egg production and delays remating, but previous research has not clearly linked male accessory gland products to these effects.
  • RNA sequencing revealed that mating and MAG-injection regulate different sets of genes related to egg development, immune response, musculature, and lifespan, highlighting new insights into how these seminal fluid components influence reproductive traits.

Article Abstract

Mating has profound physiological and behavioural consequences for female insects. During copulation, female insects typically receive not only sperm, but a complex ejaculate containing hundreds of proteins and other molecules from male reproductive tissues, primarily the reproductive accessory glands. The post-mating phenotypes affected by male accessory gland (MAG) proteins include egg development, attraction to oviposition hosts, mating, attractiveness, sperm storage, feeding and lifespan. In the Mexican fruit fly, Anastrepha ludens, mating increases egg production and the latency to remating. However, previous studies have not found a clear relationship between injection of MAG products and oviposition or remating inhibition in this species. We used RNA-seq to study gene expression in mated, unmated and MAG-injected females to understand the potential mating- and MAG-regulated genes and pathways in A. ludens. Both mating and MAG-injection regulated transcripts and pathways related to egg development. Other transcripts regulated by mating included those with orthologs predicted to be involved in immune response, musculature and chemosensory perception, whereas those regulated by MAG-injection were predicted to be involved in translational control, sugar regulation, diet detoxification and lifespan determination. These results suggest new phenotypes that may be influenced by seminal fluid molecules in A. ludens. Understanding these influences is critical for developing novel tools to manage A. ludens.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/imb.12719DOI Listing

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