Review Article
THE GENETICS AND GENOMICS OF THE SILKWORM,BOMBYX MORI*
- Marian R. Goldsmith1,Toru Shimada2, andHiroaki Abe3
- View AffiliationsHide AffiliationsAffiliations:1Biological Sciences Department, University of Rhode Island, Kingston, Rhode Island 02881; email:[email protected]2Department of Agricultural and Environmental Biology, University of Tokyo, Tokyo 113-8657, Japan; email:[email protected]3Department of Biological Production, Faculty of Agriculture, Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology, Tokyo 183-8509, Japan; email:[email protected]
- Vol. 50:71-100(Volume publication date January 2005)
- First published as a Review in Advance on July 21, 2004
- © Annual Reviews
Abstract
We review progress in applying molecular genetic and genomic technologies to studies in the domesticated silkworm,Bombyx mori, highlighting its use as a model for Lepidoptera, and in sericulture and biotechnology. Dense molecular linkage maps are being integrated with classical linkage maps for positional cloning and marker-assisted selection. Classical mutations have been identified by a candidate gene approach. Cytogenetic and sequence analyses show that the W chromosome is composed largely of nested full-length long terminal repeat retrotransposons. Z-chromosome-linked sequences show a lack of dosage compensation. The downstream sex differentiation mechanism has been studied via the silkworm homolog ofdoublesex. Expressed sequence tagged databases have been used to discover Lepidoptera-specific genes, provide evidence for horizontal gene transfer, and construct microarrays. Physical maps using large-fragment bacterial artificial chromosome libraries have been constructed, and whole-genome shotgun sequencing is underway. Germline transformation and transient expression systems are well established and available for functional studies, high-level protein expression, and gene silencing via RNA interference.