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Annotation of glycolysis, gluconeogenesis, and trehaloneogenesis pathways provide insight into carbohydrate metabolism in the Asian citrus psyllid.

Blessy TamayoKyle KercherChad VosburgCrissy MassiminoMargaryta R JerniganDenisse L HasanDouglas HarperAnuja MathewSamuel AdkinsTeresa D ShippyPrashant S HosmaniMirella Flores-GonzalezNaftali PanitzLukas A MuellerWayne Brian HunterJoshua B BenoitSusan J BrownTom D'EliaSurya Saha
Published in: GigaByte (Hong Kong, China) (2022)
Citrus greening disease is caused by the pathogen Candidatus Liberibacter asiaticus and transmitted by the Asian citrus psyllid, Diaphorina citri . No curative treatment or significant prevention mechanism exists for this disease, which causes economic losses from reduced citrus production. A high-quality genome of D. citri is being manually annotated to provide accurate gene models to identify novel control targets and increase understanding of this pest. Here, we annotated 25 D. citri genes involved in glycolysis and gluconeogenesis, and seven in trehaloneogenesis. Comparative analysis showed that glycolysis genes in D. citri are highly conserved but copy numbers vary. Analysis of expression levels revealed upregulation of several enzymes in the glycolysis pathway in the thorax, consistent with the primary use of glucose by thoracic flight muscles. Manually annotating these core metabolic pathways provides accurate genomic foundation for developing gene-targeting therapeutics to control D. citri .
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