The cotton leaf roller, Sylepta derogata, is a silk-producing insect pest. While young larvae feed on the underside of leaves, the older ones roll cotton leaves and feed on the leaf edges, which defoliates cotton plants.
More...The cotton leaf roller, Sylepta derogata, is a silk-producing insect pest. While young larvae feed on the underside of leaves, the older ones roll cotton leaves and feed on the leaf edges, which defoliates cotton plants. The larvae produce silk to stabilize the rolled leaf and to balloon from used to new leaves. Despite the significance of silk in the biology of pest insect species, there is virtually no information on the genes involved in forming their silk. This is a substantial knowledge gap because some of these genes may be valuable targets for developing molecular pest management technologies. We addressed the gap by posing the hypothesis that silk gland gene expression changes during the transition from larvae to pupae. We tested our hypothesis using RNA-seq to investigate changes in silk gland gene expression at three developmental stages. These new data will guide the selection of key genes that may be targeted for in planta gene-silencing technologies for sustainable cotton agriculture.
Less...| Accession | PRJNA283156 |
| Data Type | Transcriptome or Gene expression |
| Scope | Multiisolate |
| Organism | Haritalodes derogata[Taxonomy ID: 517475] Eukaryota; Metazoa; Ecdysozoa; Arthropoda; Hexapoda; Insecta; Pterygota; Neoptera; Endopterygota; Lepidoptera; Glossata; Ditrysia; Pyraloidea; Crambidae; Spilomelinae; Haritalodes derogata |
| Submission | Registration date: 5-May-2015 Yangzhou University |
| Relevance | Agricultural |
Project Data:
| Resource Name | Number of Links |
|---|
| BioSample | 1 |
No public data is linked to this project. Any recently released data that cites this project will be linked to it within a few days.