Study of tergal glands morphogenesis through an integrative analysis of genomic data
Author
Other authors
Publication date
2014-09Abstract
About 50% of living species are holometabolan insects. Therefore, unraveling the ori-
gin of insect metamorphosis from the hemimetabolan (gradual metamorphosis) to the
holometabolan (sudden metamorphosis at the end of the life cycle) mode is equivalent
to explaining how all this biodiversity originated. One of the problems with studying
the evolution from hemimetaboly to holometaboly is that most information is available
only in holometabolan species. Within the hemimetabolan group, our model, the cock-
roach Blattella germanica, is the most studied species. However, given that the study of
adult morphogenesis at organismic level is still complex, we focused on the study of the
tergal gland (TG) as a minimal model of metamorphosis. The TG is formed in tergites
7 and 8 (T7-8) in the last days of the last nymphal instar (nymph 6). The comparative
study of four T7-T8 transcriptomes provided us with crucial keys of TG formation, but
also essential information about the mechanisms and circuitry that allows the shift from
nymphal to adult morphogenesis.
Document Type
Master's final project
Document version
Director/a: Xavier Bellés
Language
English
Keywords
RNA
Insectes -- Morfogènesi
Pages
59 p.
Note
Curs 2013-2014
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