The pathogenesis of Bombyx mori cytoplasmic polyhedrosis virus (BmCPV) infection is unclear, although accumulating evidence indicates that circular RNAs (circRNAs), which act as competing endogenous RNAs or positive regulators, play important roles in regulating gene expression in eukaryotes and, thus, may play a role in BmCPV infections. To explore the expression and biological functions of circRNAs in the silkworm midgut following BmCPV infection, silkworm circRNA expression profiles of normal midgut tissue (control) and BmCPV-infected midgut tissue (test) were determined using high-through sequencing. A total of 9,753 and 7,475circRNAs were detected from the control and test samples, respectively. The two samples shared 6,085 circRNAs, while 646 and 737 circRNAs were expressed specifically in the control and test samples, respectively. A total of 3,638 circRNAs were shown to be differentially expressed, and 400 circRNAs were substantially differentially expressed with a fold-change ≥ 2.0 (p< 0.05 and a false discover rate < 0.05), of which 294 were up-regulated and 106 were down-regulated following infection. Gene Ontology and Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes pathway enrichment analyses were conducted to determine the principal functions of the substantially differentially regulated genes. circRNA-miRNA interaction networks were constructed based on a correlation analysis between the differentially expressed circRNAs and the nature of their microRNA (miRNA) binding sites. The network inferred that 13 miRNAs interacting with 193 circRNAs were among the 300 most abundant relationships. bmo-miR-3389-5p, bmo-miR-745-3p, and bmo-miR-3262 were related to 30, 34, and 34 circRNAs, respectively. circRNA_8115, circRNA_9444, circRNA_4553, circRNA_0827, and circRNA_6649 contained six, five, four, four, and four miRNA binding sites, respectively. We further found that alternative circularization of circRNAs is a common feature in silkworms and that the junction sites of many silkworm circRNAs are flanked by canonical GT/AG splicing signals. Our study is the first to show the circRNA response to virus infection. Thus, it provides a novel perspective on circRNA-miRNA interactions during BmCPV pathogenesis, and it lays the foundation for future research of the potential roles of circRNAs in BmCPV pathogenesis.
Keywords: BmCPV; circRNA; expression profile; infection; miRNA; midgut; silkworm.