Suppression of transgenerational lipid provisioning inhibits desiccation resistance, but not diapause, in the vector mosquito, Aedes albopictus

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Abstract

Transgenerational signaling allows many organisms to anticipate seasonal variation. Diapause, a hormonally-programmed period of developmental arrest, is a widespread anticipatory seasonal response that is often mediated by transgenerational signaling. Despite the well-established adaptive significance of diapause, the molecular and physiological basis of transgenerational diapause signaling remains largely unresolved. Since lipid accumulation is a hallmark of diapause preparation, we hypothesized that increased lipid provisioning and accumulation mediate transgenerational diapause signaling. To test this hypothesis, we suppressed transcripts of two lipid metabolism genes using RNA-interference in the maternal generation of the vector mosquito, Aedes albopictus . We show that a reduction in maternal lipid storage droplet 2 ( lsd2) transcript abundance, but not diacyl-glycerol O-acyltransferase 1 ( dgat1 ) transcript abundance, reduces egg triglyceride levels. Suppression of lsd2 in adult females also leads to increased egg desiccation, inhibits the starvation tolerance of larvae, and decreases egg overwinter survival. However, knockdown of lsd2 does not affect diapause incidence, the timing of diapause termination, and post-diapause development. Together, our results indicate that transgenerational lipid provisioning affects diapause-associated overwintering fitness traits, but not the regulation of entry into diapause or termination of diapause.

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