Molecular identification of a peroxidase gene controlling body size in the entomopathogenic nematode Steinernema hermaphroditum
Molecular identification of a peroxidase gene controlling body size in the entomopathogenic nematode Steinernema hermaphroditum
Schwartz, H. T. T.; Tan, C.-H.; Peraza, J.; Raymundo, K. L. T.; Sternberg, P. W.
AbstractThe entomopathogenic nematode Steinernema hermaphroditum was recently rediscovered and is being developed as a genetically tractable experimental system for the study of previously unexplored biology, including parasitism of its insect hosts and mutualism with its bacterial endosymbiont Xenorhabdus griffiniae. Through whole genome re-sequencing and genetic mapping we have for the first time molecularly identified the gene responsible for a mutationally defined phenotypic locus in an entomopathogenic nematode. In the process we observed an unexpected mutational spectrum following EMS mutagenesis in this species. We find that the ortholog of the essential C. elegans peroxidase gene skpo-2 controls body size and shape in S. hermaphroditum. We confirmed this identification by inactivating the gene using CRISPR Cas9. We propose that the identification of skpo-2 will accelerate gene targeting in other Steinernema entomopathogenic nematodes used commercially in pest control, as skpo-2 is X-linked and males hemizygous for loss of its function can mate, making skpo-2 an easily recognized and maintained marker for use in co CRISPR.