Role of juvenile hormone receptor in silkworm larval brain development and domestication.

Zool Res

Guangdong Provincial Key Laboratory of Insect Developmental Biology and Applied Technology, Guangzhou Key Laboratory of Insect Development Regulation and Application Research, Institute of Insect Science and Technology, School of Life Sciences, South China Normal University, Guangzhou, Guangdong 510631, China.

Published: September 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • * The study focuses on how the juvenile hormone (JH) affects brain development in domesticated silkworms, linking changes in the larval brain's morphology and behavior to their domestication process.
  • * Using CRISPR/Cas9 techniques, researchers found that knocking out the JH receptor led to developmental issues in the brain and changes in signaling pathways, highlighting the role of biochemical pathways in larval brain evolution and domestication in silkworms.

Article Abstract

The insect brain is the central part of the neurosecretory system, which controls morphology, physiology, and behavior during the insect's lifecycle. Lepidoptera are holometabolous insects, and their brains develop during the larval period and metamorphosis into the adult form. As the only fully domesticated insect, the Lepidoptera silkworm experienced changes in larval brain morphology and certain behaviors during the domestication process. Hormonal regulation in insects is a key factor in multiple processes. However, how juvenile hormone (JH) signals regulate brain development in Lepidoptera species, especially in the larval stage, remains elusive. We recently identified the JH receptor ( ) as a putative domestication gene. How artificial selection on impacts brain and behavioral domestication is another important issue addressing Darwin's theory on domestication. Here, CRISPR/Cas9-mediated knockout of caused developmental retardation in the brain, unlike precocious pupation of the cuticle. At the whole transcriptome level, the ecdysteroid (20-hydroxyecdysone, 20E) signaling and downstream pathways were overactivated in the mutant cuticle but not in the brain. Pathways related to cell proliferation and specialization processes, such as extracellular matrix (ECM)-receptor interaction and tyrosine metabolism pathways, were suppressed in the brain. Molecular evolutionary analysis and assay identified an amino acid replacement located in a novel motif under positive selection in . , which decreased transcriptional binding activity. The MET1 protein showed a changed structure and dynamic features, as well as a weakened co-expression gene network, compared with . . Based on comparative transcriptomic analyses, we proposed a pathway downstream of JH signaling (i.e., tyrosine metabolism pathway) that likely contributed to silkworm larval brain development and domestication and highlighted the importance of the biogenic amine system in larval evolution during silkworm domestication.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8455460PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.24272/j.issn.2095-8137.2021.126DOI Listing

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