Premchand Gandra
Dow AgroSciences
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Featured researches published by Premchand Gandra.
Insect Biochemistry and Molecular Biology | 2015
Chitvan Khajuria; Ana María Vélez; Murugesan Rangasamy; Haichuan Wang; Elane Fishilevich; Meghan Frey; N. P. Carneiro; Premchand Gandra; Kenneth E. Narva; Blair D. Siegfried
RNA interference (RNAi) is being developed as a potential tool for insect pest management and one of the most likely target pest species for transgenic plants that express double stranded RNA (dsRNA) is the western corn rootworm. Thus far, most genes proposed as targets for RNAi in rootworm cause lethality in the larval stage. In this study, we describe RNAi-mediated knockdown of two developmental genes, hunchback (hb) and brahma (brm), in the western corn rootworm delivered via dsRNA fed to adult females. dsRNA feeding caused a significant decrease in hb and brm transcripts in the adult females. Although total oviposition was not significantly affected, there was almost complete absence of hatching in the eggs collected from females exposed to dsRNA for either gene. These results confirm that RNAi is systemic in nature for western corn rootworms. These results also indicate that hunchback and brahma play important roles in rootworm embryonic development and could provide useful RNAi targets in adult rootworms to prevent crop injury by impacting the population of larval progeny of exposed adults. The ability to deliver dsRNA in a trans-generational manner by feeding to adult rootworms may offer an additional approach to utilizing RNAi for rootworm pest management. The potential to develop parental RNAi technology targeting progeny of adult rootworms in combination with Bt proteins or dsRNA lethal to larvae may increase opportunities to develop sustainable approaches to rootworm management involving RNAi technologies for rootworm control.
Journal of Applied Entomology | 2015
Huarong Li; Chitvan Khajuria; Murugesan Rangasamy; Premchand Gandra; M. Fitter; C. Geng; A. Woosely; J. Hasler; G. Schulenberg; Sarah E. Worden; R. McEwan; C. Evans; Blair D. Siegfried; Kenneth E. Narva
Transgenic maize plants expressing dsRNA targeting western corn rootworm (WCR, Diabrotica virgifera virgifera LeConte) v‐ATPase subunit C mRNA for RNAi provided significant root protection from WCR larval feeding damage in greenhouse assays compared to negative controls. Transcribed hairpin dsRNA in WCR‐resistant maize plants was present as both intact hairpin‐derived dsRNA and plant‐processed siRNA. Therefore, the ability of dsRNA and siRNA targeting Dv v‐ATPase CmRNA to cause an RNAi response was studied in both WCR larvae and adults. In 9‐day diet‐based feeding assays, dsRNA of at least 60 bp in length resulted in high levels of larval mortality. In contrast, 15‐, 25‐ or 27‐bp dsRNAs or pooled 21‐bp siRNAs did not cause mortality of exposed larvae. When larvae were fed with diet overlaid with siRNAs, Dv v‐ATPase C transcript levels did not change. Conversely, when WCR larvae were fed with diet overlaid with 184‐bp dsRNA, the mRNA level was reduced by >20‐fold relative to yfp dsRNA negative control. Similarly, 184‐bp dsRNA caused 100% mortality of WCR adults, whereas the mortality of adults fed on diet treated with siRNAs was similar to the negative control. Feeding adults with siRNAs on diet did not affect the level of Dv v‐ATPase CmRNA transcripts, whereas adults fed with the 184‐bp dsRNA showed approximately 35‐fold reduction in the target mRNA level. Similar results were obtained with the WCR adults injected with 184‐bp dsRNA or 21‐bp siRNA. These results suggest that only long dsRNA or hairpin‐derived dsRNA is effective in causing lethal knock‐down of Dv v‐ATPase CmRNA. These results have implications for efficacious plant‐delivered dsRNA for the protection of transgenic maize from WCR feeding damage and for the risk assessment of transgenic maize expressing insecticidal dsRNA.
Insect Science | 2018
Huarong Li; Andrew J. Bowling; Premchand Gandra; Murugesan Rangasamy; Heather E. Pence; Robert E. McEwan; Chitvan Khajuria; Blair D. Siegfried; Kenneth E. Narva
Western corn rootworm (WCR, Diabrotica virgifera virgifera LeConte) is highly sensitive to orally delivered double‐stranded RNA (dsRNA). RNAi in WCR is systemic and spreads throughout the insect body. This raises the question whether transitive RNAi is a mechanism that functions in WCR to amplify the RNAi response via production of secondary siRNA. Secondary siRNA production is achieved through RNA‐dependent RNA polymerase (RdRP) activity in other eukaryotic organisms, but RdRP has not been identified in WCR and any other insects. This study visualized the spread of the RNAi‐mediated knockdown of Dv v‐ATPase C mRNA throughout the WCR gut and other tissues using high‐sensitivity branched DNA in situ hybridization. Furthermore, we did not detect either secondary siRNA production or transitive RNAi in WCR through siRNA sequence profile analysis. Nucleotide mismatched sequences introduced into either the sense or antisense strand of v‐ATPase C dsRNAs were maintained in siRNAs derived from WCR fed with the mismatched dsRNAs in a strand specific manner. The distribution of all siRNAs was restricted to within the original target sequence regions, which may indicate the lack of new dsRNA synthesis leading to production of secondary siRNA. Thus, the systemic spread of RNAi in WCR may be derived from the original dsRNA molecules taken up from the gut lumen. These results indicate that the initial dsRNA dose is important for a lethal systemic RNAi response in WCR and have implications in developing effective dsRNA traits to control WCR and in resistance management to prolong the durability of RNAi trait technology.
Scientific Reports | 2018
Eileen Knorr; Elane Fishilevich; Linda Tenbusch; Meghan Frey; Murugesan Rangasamy; André Billion; Sarah E. Worden; Premchand Gandra; Kanika Arora; Wendy Lo; Greg Schulenberg; Pablo Valverde-Garcia; Andreas Vilcinskas; Kenneth E. Narva
RNAi shows potential as an agricultural technology for insect control, yet, a relatively low number of robust lethal RNAi targets have been demonstrated to control insects of agricultural interest. In the current study, a selection of lethal RNAi target genes from the iBeetle (Tribolium castaneum) screen were used to demonstrate efficacy of orthologous targets in the economically important coleopteran pests Diabrotica virgifera virgifera and Meligethes aeneus. Transcript orthologs of 50 selected genes were analyzed in D. v. virgifera diet-based RNAi bioassays; 21 of these RNAi targets showed mortality and 36 showed growth inhibition. Low dose injection- and diet-based dsRNA assays in T. castaneum and D. v. virgifera, respectively, enabled the identification of the four highly potent RNAi target genes: Rop, dre4, ncm, and RpII140. Maize was genetically engineered to express dsRNA directed against these prioritized candidate target genes. T0 plants expressing Rop, dre4, or RpII140 RNA hairpins showed protection from D. v. virgifera larval feeding damage. dsRNA targeting Rop, dre4, ncm, and RpII140 in M. aeneus also caused high levels of mortality both by injection and feeding. In summary, high throughput systems for model organisms can be successfully used to identify potent RNA targets for difficult-to-work with agricultural insect pests.
Toxins | 2017
Haichuan Wang; Seong-il Eyun; Kanika Arora; Sek Yee Tan; Premchand Gandra; Etsuko N. Moriyama; Chitvan Khajuria; Jessica Jurzenski; Huarong Li; Maia Donahue; Kenneth E. Narva; Blair D. Siegfried
With Next Generation Sequencing technologies, high-throughput RNA sequencing (RNAseq) was conducted to examine gene expression in neonates of Diabrotica virgifera virgifera (LeConte) (Western Corn Rootworm, WCR) challenged with individual proteins of the binary Bacillus thuringiensis insecticidal proteins, Cry34Ab1 and Cry35Ab1, and the combination of Cry34/Cry35Ab1, which together are active against rootworm larvae. Integrated results of three different statistical comparisons identified 114 and 1300 differentially expressed transcripts (DETs) in the Cry34Ab1 and Cry34/35Ab1 treatment, respectively, as compared to the control. No DETs were identified in the Cry35Ab1 treatment. Putative Bt binding receptors previously identified in other insect species were not identified in DETs in this study. The majority of DETs (75% with Cry34Ab1 and 68.3% with Cry34/35Ab1 treatments) had no significant hits in the NCBI nr database. In addition, 92 DETs were shared between Cry34Ab1 and Cry34/35Ab1 treatments. Further analysis revealed that the most abundant DETs in both Cry34Ab1 and Cry34/35Ab1 treatments were associated with binding and catalytic activity. Results from this study confirmed the nature of these binary toxins against WCR larvae and provide a fundamental profile of expression pattern of genes in response to challenge of the Cry34/35Ab1 toxin, which may provide insight into potential resistance mechanisms.
Insect Biochemistry and Molecular Biology | 2018
Elane Fishilevich; Andrew J. Bowling; Meghan Frey; Pohao Wang; Wendy Lo; Murugesan Rangasamy; Sarah E. Worden; Heather E. Pence; Premchand Gandra; Shannon Whitlock; Greg Schulenberg; Eileen Knorr; Linda Tenbusch; Jamie R. Lutz; Stephen Novak; Ronda L. Hamm; Karl D. Schnelle; Andreas Vilcinskas; Kenneth E. Narva
Western corn rootworm, Diabrotica virgifera virgifera, is the major agronomically important pest of maize in the US Corn Belt. To augment the repertoire of the available dsRNA-based traits that control rootworm, we explored a potentially haplolethal gene target, wings up A (wupA), which encodes Troponin I. Troponin I, a component of the Troponin-Tropomyosin complex, is an inhibitory protein involved in muscle contraction. In situ hybridization showed that feeding on wupA-targeted dsRNAs caused systemic transcript knockdown in D. v. virgifera larvae. The knockdown of wupA transcript, and by extension Troponin I protein, led to deterioration of the striated banding pattern in larval body muscle and decreased muscle integrity. Additionally, the loss of function of the circular muscles surrounding the alimentary system led to significant accumulation of food material in the hind gut, which is consistent with a loss of peristaltic motion of the alimentary canal. In this study, we demonstrate that wupA dsRNA is lethal in D. v. virgifera larvae when fed via artificial diet, with growth inhibition of up to 50% within two days of application. Further, wupA hairpins can be stably expressed and detected in maize. Maize expressing wupA hairpins exhibit robust root protection in greenhouse bioassays, with several maize transgene integration events showing root protection equivalent to commercial insecticidal protein-expressing maize.
Insect Biochemistry and Molecular Biology | 2016
Elane Fishilevich; Ana María Vélez; Chitvan Khajuria; Meghan Frey; Ronda L. Hamm; Haichuan Wang; Greg Schulenberg; Andrew J. Bowling; Heather E. Pence; Premchand Gandra; Kanika Arora; Nicholas P. Storer; Kenneth E. Narva; Blair D. Siegfried
Archive | 2014
Kenneth E. Narva; Huarong Li; Chaoxian Geng; Kanika Arora; Balaji Veeramani; Premchand Gandra; Sarah E. Worden; Andreas Vilcinskas; Eileen Knorr; Elane Fishilevich; Murugesan Rangasamy; Meghan Frey
Archive | 2017
Kenneth E. Narva; Huarong Li; Chaoxian Geng; Navin Elango; Matthew J. Henry; Murugesan Rangasamy; Aaron T. Woosley; Kanika Arora; Premchand Gandra; Sarah E. Worden; Elane Fishilevich
Archive | 2016
Kenneth E. Narva; Kanika Arora; Muregesan Rangasamy; Balaji Veeramani; Premchand Gandra; Sarah E. Worden; Huarong Li; Andreas Vilcinskas; Eileen Knorr