Search results for "HOST-PARASITE"

showing 10 items of 355 documents

Non-structural proteins P17 and P33 are involved in the assembly of the internal membrane-containing virus PRD1.

2015

AbstractBacteriophage PRD1, which has been studied intensively at the structural and functional levels, still has some gene products with unknown functions and certain aspects of the PRD1 assembly process have remained unsolved. In this study, we demonstrate that the phage-encoded non-structural proteins P17 and P33, either individually or together, complement the defect in a temperature-sensitive GroES mutant of Escherichia coli for host growth and PRD1 propagation. Confocal microscopy of fluorescent fusion proteins revealed co-localisation between P33 and P17 as well as between P33 and the host chaperonin GroEL. A fluorescence recovery after photobleaching assay demonstrated that the diff…

assemblychaperoninvirusesMutantfluorescence recovery after photobleachingViral Nonstructural Proteinsmedicine.disease_causeVirus ReplicationChaperoninHost-Parasite InteractionsBacteriophagebacteriophageVirologymedicineEscherichia colifluorescent proteinBacteriophage PRD1Escherichia colimembrane virusMicroscopy Confocalbiologyprotein localisationVirus Assemblyta1182Fluorescence recovery after photobleachingGroESChaperonin 60biology.organism_classificationFusion proteinGroEL3. Good healthCell biologyVirology
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Population structure of a parasitic plant and its perennial host

2002

Characterization of host and parasite population genetic structure and estimation of gene flow among populations are essential for the understanding of parasite local adaptation and coevolutionary interactions between hosts and parasites. We examined two aspects of population structure in a parasitic plant, the greater dodder (Cuscuta europaea) and its host plant, the stinging nettle (Urtica dioica), using allozyme data from 12 host and eight parasite populations. First, we examined whether hosts exposed to parasitism in the past contain higher levels of genetic variation. Second, we examined whether host and parasite populations differ in terms of population structure and if their populati…

education.field_of_studyGeographyEcologyParasitic plantHost (biology)PopulationGenetic VariationUrtica dioicaParasitismZoologyCuscuta europaeaBiologybiology.organism_classificationHost-Parasite InteractionsIsoenzymesGene FrequencyGenetic variationGeneticsParasite hostingeducationAllelesFinlandSolanaceaeGenetics (clinical)Local adaptationHeredity
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Differences in parasite susceptibility and costs of resistance between naturally exposed and unexposed host populations

2009

It is generally assumed that resistance to parasitism entails costs. Consequently, hosts evolving in the absence of parasites are predicted to invest less in costly resistance mechanisms than hosts consistently exposed to parasites. This prediction has, however, rarely been tested in natural populations. We studied the susceptibility of three naïve, three parasitized and one recently isolated Asellus aquaticus isopod populations to an acanthocephalan parasite. We found that parasitized populations, with the exception of the isopod population sympatric with the parasite strain used, were less susceptible to the parasite than the naïve populations. Exposed but uninfected (resistant) isopods f…

education.field_of_studybiologyHost (biology)PopulationDefence mechanismsParasitismZoologybiology.organism_classificationSurvival AnalysisAcanthocephalaHost-Parasite InteractionsSympatric speciationAnimalsRegression AnalysisParasite hostingAsellus aquaticuseducationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsIsopodaLocal adaptationJournal of Evolutionary Biology
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No uniform associations between parasite prevalence and environmental nutrients

2014

The resource quality of the host has been shown to affect parasite transmission success, prevalence, and virulence. Seasonal availability of environmental nutrients alters density and stoichiometric quality (carbon–nutrient ratios) of both producers and consumers, suggesting that nutrient availability may drive fluctuations in parasite prevalence patterns observed in nature. We examined the interactions between the population dynamics of a keystone herbivore, Daphnia, and its parasites, and their associations with water nutrient concentrations, resource quantity and quality, and other environmental variables (temperature, pH, oxygen concentration) in a small lake, using general linear model…

epibiontseducation.field_of_studyHerbivorebiologyseasonal epidemicsHost (biology)EcologyPopulationLarssonia obtusabiology.organism_classificationDaphniastoichiometryhost-parasite interactionsNutrientPasteuria ramosasDaphnia longispinamicrosporidiaParasite hostingSpecies richnessEpibionteducationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsEcology
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Performance of Host-Races of the Fruit Fly,Tephritis conuraon a Derived Host Plant, the Cabbage ThistleCirsium oleraceum: Implications for the Origin…

2008

The thistle-infesting fruit fly Tephritis conura Loew (Diptera: Tephritidae) forms host races on the melancholy thistle, Cirsium hetewphyllum (L.) Hill (Asterales: Asteraceae) and the cabbage thistle, Cirsium olemceum (L.). Scop. Previous research indicates that the host shift occurred from C. hetewphyllum to C. oleraceum. In this paper we address whether the host shift involved physiological adaptations by studying oviposition acceptance and survival of the two host races on the derived host C. oleraceum. Performance differed significantly between host races. T. conura originating from C. oleraceum produced adults in 75% of all egg-laying trials in contrast to only 6.6% in T. conura origin…

food.ingredientOvipositionPopulationCirsiumArticleHost-Parasite InteractionsTephritis conurafoodCirsiumTephritidaeBotanyCirsium heterophyllumAnimalseducationalternative hostFlavonoidseducation.field_of_studybiologyHost (biology)fungiPupaCirsium oleraceumGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationAdaptation PhysiologicalfitnessspeciationLarvaInsect ScienceThistleFemaleCirsium heterophyllumperformanceJournal of Insect Science
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Diplostomum spathaceum metacercarial infection and colour change in salmonid fish

2004

Colour changes in two salmonid fish, the salmon (Salmo salar) and sea trout (S. trutta), were examined in relation to infection with the trematode Diplostomum spathaceum. This parasite had no effect on the rate of colour change in these fish, although species specific differences in colour adjustment times were observed. Increasing asymmetry in parasite numbers between the right and left eye, which could lead to the retention of vision in one eye, nevertheless tended to reduce the colour change time in salmon with moderate infection (P=0.08). This first experimental attempt to examine colour changes in fish in relation to eye fluke infections provides grounds for future investigations. The …

genetic structuresTroutSalmo salarZoologySkin PigmentationTrematode InfectionsSalmonid fishEyeHost-Parasite InteractionsFish DiseasesSpecies SpecificityAnimalsParasite hostingSea troutSalmoSalmonidaeGeneral VeterinarybiologyEcologyGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationLeft eyeInfectious DiseasesDiplostomum spathaceumInsect ScienceParasitologyTrematodasense organsTrematodaParasitology Research
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The endangered freshwater pearl mussel Margaritifera margaritifera shows adaptation to a local salmonid host in Finland

2022

1. The freshwater pearl mussel Margaritifera margaritifera (FPM) is an endangered unionid which has a glochidium larva that attaches to the gills of Atlantic salmon Salmo salar or brown trout S. trutta, although some FPM populations have been shown to exclusively attach to only one of these species. The origin of host fish populations may be crucial for conservation actions for this mussel species, but the relative suitability of local (sympatric) and non- local (allopatric) salmonid populations as the hosts for FPM has been studied only rarely. We hypothesised that FPM glochidia would show adaptation to local salmonid strains and, there-fore, that they would be more successful (abundant, l…

glochidiasopeutuminenhost-parasite co-evolutiontoukatlajiensuojeluconservationlohikalatUnionoidaparasitismiAquatic Scienceisäntälajitlocal adaptationjokihelmisimpukka
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Infection success of Echinoparyphium aconiatum (Trematoda) in its snail host under high temperature: role of host resistance

2014

Background Extreme weather events such as summer heat waves become more frequent owing to global climate change and are predicted to alter disease dynamics. This is because high temperatures can reduce host immune function. Predicting the impact of climate change on host-parasite interactions is, however, difficult as temperature may also affect parasite infective stages and other host characteristics determining the outcome of interaction. Methods Two experiments were conducted to investigate these phenomena in a Lymnaea stagnalis–Echinoparyphium aconiatum (Trematoda) interaction. In the first experiment, the effects of exposure of snails to experimental heat waves [maintenance at 25°C vs.…

heat waveEchinoparyphium aconiatum; Global climate change; Heat wave; Lymnaea; stagnalis; Resistance to infection; Host-parasite interaction; Experimental assessmentHot TemperatureExperimental assessmentResearchGlobal climate changeSnailsglobal climate changeresistance to infectionhost-parasite interactionpiippolimakotiloInfectious DiseasesHeat waveHost-Pathogen Interactionsechinoparyphium aconiatumResistance to infectionAnimalsParasitologyLymnaea stagnalisexperimental assessmentTrematodaHost-parasite interactionCercariaEchinoparyphium aconiatum
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Divergent parasite infections in sympatric cichlid species in Lake Victoria

2018

Parasitism has been proposed as a factor in host speciation, as an agent affecting coexistence of host species in species‐rich communities and as a driver of post‐speciation diversification. Young adaptive radiations of closely related host species of varying ecological and genomic differentiation provide interesting opportunities to explore interactions between patterns of parasitism, divergence and coexistence of sympatric host species. Here, we explored patterns in ectoparasitism in a community of 16 fully sympatric cichlid species at Makobe Island in Lake Victoria, a model system of vertebrate adaptive radiation. We asked whether host niche, host abundance or host genetic differentiatio…

host-parasite interactionsgenomic differentiationerilaistuminenJanzen-Connell mechanismperimälajiutuminenahvenkalatsympatric speciationparasitismiisäntälajitadaptive radiationincipient species
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Experimental approaches to study the transmission and infection of Cardiocephaloides longicollis (Rudolphi, 1819) Dubois, 1982 (Trematoda, Strigeidae…

2023

Los trematodos (Platyhelminthes, Trematoda) son componentes ubicuos de los ecosistemas y, en las últimas décadas, los investigadores han mostrado un interés creciente en ellos, especialmente en sus estrategias y mecanismos de transmisión e infección. Los digeneos forman un grupo grande y generalmente tienen un ciclo de vida complejo con tres huéspedes. El primer huésped intermedio suele ser un molusco, el segundo huésped intermedio puede ser un huésped invertebrado o vertebrado, y el huésped definitivo suele ser un vertebrado. En el huésped definitivo, el parásito se convierte en adulto y se reproduce sexualmente. Luego, los huevos del parásito se liberan en el medio ambiente donde el mirac…

host-parasite modelaquacultureCardiocephaloides longicollisUNESCO::CIENCIAS DE LA VIDAfish parasitesstrigeid (Trematode Digenea)
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