Marcé D. Lorenzen
Agricultural Research Service
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Featured researches published by Marcé D. Lorenzen.
Insect Molecular Biology | 2005
Yasuyuki Arakane; S. Muthukrishnan; Karl J. Kramer; Charles A. Specht; Yoshinori Tomoyasu; Marcé D. Lorenzen; Michael R. Kanost; Richard W. Beeman
Functional analysis of the two chitin synthase genes, TcCHS1 and TcCHS2, in the red flour beetle, Tribolium castaneum, revealed unique and complementary roles for each gene. TcCHS1‐specific RNA interference (RNAi) disrupted all three types of moult (larval–larval, larval–pupal and pupal–adult) and greatly reduced whole‐body chitin content. Exon‐specific RNAi showed that splice variant 8a of TcCHS1 was required for both the larval‐pupal and pupal‐adult moults, whereas splice variant 8b was required only for the latter. TcCHS2‐specific RNAi had no effect on metamorphosis or on total body chitin content. However, RNAi‐mediated down‐regulation of TcCHS2, but not TcCHS1, led to cessation of feeding, a dramatic shrinkage in larval size and reduced chitin content in the midgut.
Nucleic Acids Research | 2010
Hee Shin Kim; Terence Murphy; Jing Xia; Doina Caragea; Yoonseong Park; Richard W. Beeman; Marcé D. Lorenzen; Stephen Butcher; J. Robert Manak; Susan J. Brown
BeetleBase (http://www.beetlebase.org) has been updated to provide more comprehensive genomic information for the red flour beetle Tribolium castaneum. The database contains genomic sequence scaffolds mapped to 10 linkage groups (genome assembly release Tcas_3.0), genetic linkage maps, the official gene set, Reference Sequences from NCBI (RefSeq), predicted gene models, ESTs and whole-genome tiling array data representing several developmental stages. The database was reconstructed using the upgraded Generic Model Organism Database (GMOD) modules. The genomic data is stored in a PostgreSQL relatational database using the Chado schema and visualized as tracks in GBrowse. The updated genetic map is visualized using the comparative genetic map viewer CMAP. To enhance the database search capabilities, the BLAST and BLAT search tools have been integrated with the GMOD tools. BeetleBase serves as a long-term repository for Tribolium genomic data, and is compatible with other model organism databases.
BMC Biology | 2009
Jochen Trauner; Johannes B. Schinko; Marcé D. Lorenzen; Teresa D. Shippy; Ernst A. Wimmer; Richard W. Beeman; Martin Klingler; Gregor Bucher; Susan J. Brown
BackgroundGiven its sequenced genome and efficient systemic RNA interference response, the red flour beetle Tribolium castaneum is a model organism well suited for reverse genetics. Even so, there is a pressing need for forward genetic analysis to escape the bias inherent in candidate gene approaches.ResultsTo produce easy-to-maintain insertional mutations and to obtain fluorescent marker lines to aid phenotypic analysis, we undertook a large-scale transposon mutagenesis screen. In this screen, we produced more than 6,500 new piggyBac insertions. Of these, 421 proved to be recessive lethal, 75 were semi-lethal, and eight indicated recessive sterility, while 505 showed new enhancer-trap patterns. Insertion junctions were determined for 403 lines and often appeared to be located within transcription units. Insertion sites appeared to be randomly distributed throughout the genome, with the exception of a preference for reinsertion near the donor site.ConclusionA large collection of enhancer-trap and embryonic lethal beetle lines has been made available to the research community and will foster investigations into diverse fields of insect biology, pest control, and evolution. Because the genetic elements used in this screen are species-nonspecific, and because the crossing scheme does not depend on balancer chromosomes, the methods presented herein should be broadly applicable for many insect species.
Journal of Proteome Research | 2009
Kaley Morris; Marcé D. Lorenzen; Yasuaki Hiromasa; John M. Tomich; Cris Oppert; Elena N. Elpidina; Konstantin Vinokurov; Juan Luis Jurat-Fuentes; Jeff Fabrick; Brenda Oppert
Tribolium castaneum is an important agricultural pest and an advanced genetic model for coleopteran insects. We have taken advantage of the recently acquired T. castaneum genome to identify T. castaneum genes and proteins in one of the more critical environmental interfaces of the insect, the larval alimentary tract. Genetic transcripts isolated from the T. castaneum larval gut were labeled and hybridized to a custom array containing oligonucleotides from predicted genes in the T. castaneum genome. Through a ranking procedure based on relative labeling intensity, we found that approximately 17.6% of the genes represented in the array were predicted to be highly expressed in gut tissue. Several genes were selected to compare relative expression levels in larval gut, head, or carcass tissues using quantitative real-time PCR, and expression levels were, with few exceptions, consistent with the gut rankings. In parallel with the microarrays, proteins extracted from the T. castaneum larval gut were subjected to proteomic analysis. Two-dimensional electrophoretic analysis combined with MALDI-TOF resulted in the identification of 37 of 88 selected protein samples. As an alternative strategy, one-dimensional electrophoretic separation of T. castaneum larval gut proteins followed by two-dimensional nano-HPLC and ESI-MS/MS resulted in the identification of 98 proteins. A comparison of the proteomic studies indicated that 16 proteins were commonly identified in both, whereas 80 proteins from the proteomic analyses corresponded to genes with gut rankings indicative of high expression in the microarray analysis. These data serve as a resource of T. castaneum transcripts and proteins in the larval gut and provide the basis for comparative transcriptomic and proteomic studies related to the gut of coleopteran insects.
Journal of Insect Science | 2010
Analiza P. Alves; Marcé D. Lorenzen; Richard W. Beeman; John E. Foster; Blair D. Siegfried
Abstract To test the efficacy of RNA interference (RNAi) as a method for target-site screening in Diabrotica virgifera virgifera LeConte (Coleptera: Chrysomelidae) larvae, genes were identified and tested for which clear RNAi phenotypes had been identified in the Coleopteran model, Tribolium castaneum. Here the cloning of the D. v. vergifera orthologs of laccase 2 (DvvLac2) and chitin synthase 2 (DvvCHS2) is reported. Injection of DvvLac2-specific double-stranded RNA resulted in prevention of post-molt cuticular tanning, while injection of DvvCHS2-specific dsRNA reduced chitin levels in midguts. Silencing of both DvvLac2 and DvvCHS2 was confirmed by RT-PCR and quantitative RT-PCR. As in T. castaneum, RNAi-mediated gene silencing is systemic in Diabrotica. The results indicate that RNAi-induced silencing of D. v. vergifera genes provides a powerful tool for identifying potential insecticide targets.
Insect Biochemistry and Molecular Biology | 2008
Yoonseong Park; Jamie Aikins; Liangjiang Wang; Richard W. Beeman; Brenda Oppert; Jeffrey C. Lord; Susan J. Brown; Marcé D. Lorenzen; Stephen Richards; George M. Weinstock; Richard A. Gibbs
The whole genome sequence of Tribolium castaneum, a worldwide coleopteran pest of stored products, has recently been determined. In order to facilitate accurate annotation and detailed functional analysis of this genome, we have compiled and analyzed all available expressed sequence tag (EST) data. The raw data consist of 61,228 ESTs, including 10,704 obtained from NCBI and an additional 50,524 derived from 32,544 clones generated in our laboratories. These sequences were amassed from cDNA libraries representing six different tissues or stages, namely: whole embryos, whole larvae, larval hindguts and Malpighian tubules, larval fat bodies and carcasses, adult ovaries, and adult heads. Assembly of the 61,228 sequences collapsed into 12,269 clusters (groups of overlapping ESTs representing single genes), of which 10,134 mapped onto 6,463 (39%) of the 16,422 GLEAN gene models (i.e. official Tribolium gene list). Approximately 1,600 clusters (13% of the total) lack corresponding GLEAN models, despite high matches to the genome, suggesting that a considerable number of transcribed sequences were missed by the gene prediction programs or were removed by GLEAN. We conservatively estimate that the current EST set represents more than 7,500 transcription units.
Genome Biology | 2008
Suzhi Wang; Marcé D. Lorenzen; Richard W. Beeman; Susan J. Brown
BackgroundInsect genomes vary widely in size, a large fraction of which is often devoted to repetitive DNA. Re-association kinetics indicate that up to 42% of the genome of the red flour beetle, Tribolium castaneum, is repetitive. Analysis of the abundance and distribution of repetitive DNA in the recently sequenced genome of T. castaneum is important for understanding the structure and function of its genome.ResultsUsing TRF, TEpipe and RepeatScout we found that approximately 30% of the T. castaneum assembled genome is composed of repetitive DNA. Of this, 17% is found in tandem arrays and the remaining 83% is dispersed, including transposable elements, which in themselves constitute 5-6% of the genome. RepeatScout identified 31 highly repetitive DNA elements with repeat units longer than 100 bp, which constitute 7% of the genome; 65% of these highly repetitive elements and 74% of transposable elements accumulate in regions representing 40% of the assembled genome that is anchored to chromosomes. These regions tend to occur near one end of each chromosome, similar to previously described blocks of pericentric heterochromatin. They contain fewer genes with longer introns, and often correspond with regions of low recombination in the genetic map.ConclusionOur study found that transposable elements and other repetitive DNA accumulate in certain regions in the assembled T. castaneum genome. Several lines of evidence suggest these regions are derived from the large blocks of pericentric heterochromatin in T. castaneum chromosomes.
Insect Biochemistry and Molecular Biology | 2008
Kendra S. Siebert; Marcé D. Lorenzen; Susan J. Brown; Yoonseong Park; Richard W. Beeman
The use of native promoters to drive transgene expression has facilitated overexpression studies in Drosophila and other insects. We identified 12 Tubulin family members from the genome sequence of the red flour beetle, Tribolium castaneum, and used the promoter from one of these to drive constitutive expression of a transgene. The activity of the T. castaneum alpha-Tubulin1 (TcalphaTub1) putative promoter was pre-tested in conjunction with an eye-color gene, T. castaneum vermilion (Tcv), by transient expression in Tcv-deficient embryos. Such embryos showed complete rescue of larval eyespot pigmentation. We also examined the TcalphaTub1 expression pattern in germline transformants using the enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) reporter. Beetles transformed with this piggyBac-based reporter ubiquitously expressed EGFP at all stages.
Genetics | 2005
Marcé D. Lorenzen; Zaldy Doyungan; Joël Savard; Kathy J Snow; Lindsey R Crumly; Teresa D. Shippy; Jeffrey J. Stuart; Susan J. Brown; Richard W. Beeman
pp. 949-955. (2008) | 2008
Stephen Richards; Richard A. Gibbs; George M. Weinstock; Susan J. Brown; Robin E. Denell; Richard W. Beeman; Richard A.L. Gibbs; Gregor Bucher; Markus Friedrich; Cornelis J. P. Grimmelikhuijzen; Martin Klingler; Marcé D. Lorenzen; Siegfried Roth; Reinhard Schröder; Diethard Tautz; Evgeny M. Zdobnov; Donna M. Muzny; Tony Attaway; Stephanie Bell; Christian Buhay; Mimi N. Chandrabose; Dean Chavez; Kp Clerk-Blankenburg; Andrew Cree; Marvin Diep Dao; Clay Davis; Joseph Chacko; Huyen Dinh; Shannon Dugan-Rocha; Gerald Fowler