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Silencing of a LIM gene in cotton exhibits enhanced resistance against Apolygus lucorum.

Sijia LiangJing LuoMuna AlariqiZhongping XuAoli WangMuhammad Naeem ZafarJun RenFuqiu WangXuefei LiuYanfeng XinHaonan XuWeifeng GuoYanqin WangWeihua MaLizhen ChenKeith LindseyXianlong ZhangShuang-Xia Jin
Published in: Journal of cellular physiology (2021)
Plant bugs (Miridae species) have become major agricultural pests that cause increasing and severe economic damage. Plant-mediated RNA interference (RNAi) is emerging as an eco-friendly, efficient, and reliable strategy for pest management. In this study, we isolated and characterized a lethal gene of Apolygus lucorum and named it Apolygus lucorum LIM (AlLIM), which produced A. lucorum mortality rates ranging from 38% to 81%. Downregulation of the AlLIM gene expression in A. lucorum by injection of a double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) led to muscle structural disorganization that resulted in metamorphosis deficiency and increased mortality. Then we constructed a plant expression vector that enabled transgenic cotton to highly and stably express dsRNA of AlLIM (dsAlLIM) by Agrobacterium-mediated genetic transformation. In the field bioassay, dsAlLIM transgenic cotton was protected from A. lucorum damage with high efficiency, with almost no detectable yield loss. Therefore, our study successfully provides a promising genetically modified strategy to overpower A. lucorum attack.
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