Search results for "Host-parasite interactions"

showing 10 items of 330 documents

Spatial structure and nest demography reveal the influence of competition, parasitism and habitat quality on slavemaking ants and their hosts

2010

Abstract Background Natural communities are structured by intra-guild competition, predation or parasitism and the abiotic environment. We studied the relative importance of these factors in two host-social parasite ecosystems in three ant communities in Europe (Bavaria) and North America (New York, West Virginia). We tested how these factors affect colony demography, life-history and the spatial pattern of colonies, using a large sample size of more than 1000 colonies. The strength of competition was measured by the distance to the nearest competitor. Distance to the closest social parasite colony was used as a measure of parasitism risk. Nest sites (i.e., sticks or acorns) are limited in …

Food ChainEcologyAntsPopulation DynamicsNew YorkWest VirginiaModels BiologicalHost-Parasite InteractionsNesting BehaviorEnvironmental Science(all)GermanyAnimalsSymbiosisEcosystemQH540-549.5Research ArticleBMC Ecology
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Impact of parasitoid-associated polydnaviruses on plant-mediated herbivore interactions

2022

Insect herbivores interact via plant-mediated interactions in which one herbivore species induces changes in plant quality that affects the performance of a second phytophagous insect that shares the food plant. These interactions are often asymmetric due to specificity in induced plant responses to herbivore attack, amount of plant damage, elicitors in herbivore saliva and plant organ damaged by herbivores. Parasitoids and their symbiotic polydnaviruses alter herbivore physiology and behaviour and may influence how plants respond to parasitized herbivores. We argue that these phenomena affect plant-mediated interactions between herbivores. We identify that the extended phenotype of parasit…

Food plantplant-mediated interaction networksInsectamedia_common.quotation_subjectWaspsInsectHost-Parasite InteractionsParasitoidLife ScienceAnimalsHerbivoryparasitoid microbetrait-mediated indirect interactionLaboratory of EntomologyEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsmedia_commonHerbivorebiologyEcologyextended phenotypefungifood and beveragesPlantsPE&RCLaboratorium voor Entomologiebiology.organism_classificationLarvaInsect Scienceplant-insect-microbe interactionPlant qualityCurrent Opinion in Insect Science
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The nuclear protein Sge1 of Fusarium oxysporum is required for parasitic growth

2009

Dimorphism or morphogenic conversion is exploited by several pathogenic fungi and is required for tissue invasion and/or survival in the host. We have identified a homolog of a master regulator of this morphological switch in the plant pathogenic fungus Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. lycopersici. This non-dimorphic fungus causes vascular wilt disease in tomato by penetrating the plant roots and colonizing the vascular tissue. Gene knock-out and complementation studies established that the gene for this putative regulator, SGE1 (SIX Gene Expression 1), is essential for pathogenicity. In addition, microscopic analysis using fluorescent proteins revealed that Sge1 is localized in the nucleus, is no…

FusariumQH301-705.5[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]ImmunologyGenes FungalMolecular Sequence Datachampignon phytopathogèneMicrobiologyPlant RootsMicrobiologyHost-Parasite InteractionsFungal ProteinsFusariumSolanum lycopersicumVirologyGene Expression Regulation FungalFusarium oxysporumGeneticsAmino Acid SequenceBiology (General)Cloning MolecularMolecular BiologyVascular tissuePhylogenyWilt diseaseRegulation of gene expressionCell NucleusFungal proteinbiologyOrganisms Genetically ModifiedSequence Homology Amino AcidEffectorfungifood and beveragesNuclear ProteinsPathogenic fungusRC581-607Microbiology/Plant-Biotic Interactionsbiology.organism_classificationPathology/Molecular Pathology[SDE]Environmental SciencesParasitologyImmunologic diseases. AllergyResearch ArticleTranscription FactorsPLoS Pathogens
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Infection dynamics of two renal myxozoans in hatchery reared fry and juvenile Atlantic cod Gadus morhua L.

2010

SUMMARYIn order to study the infection dynamics of 2 renal myxozoans, Zschokkella hildae Auerbach, 1910 and Gadimyxa atlanticaKøie, Karlsbakk and Nylund, 2007 in cultured Atlantic cod, Gadus morhua L. aged 3–19 months, a specific single-round PCR assay and a double-label in situ hybridization protocol were developed. The results demonstrated that the 2 myxozoans show spatial separation of their development with regard to spore formation inside the renal tubules versus the collecting ducts and ureters, as well as temporal separation with Z. hildae proliferating and developing spores only once the G. atlantica infection decreases, despite the presence of both myxozoans in the smallest fry stu…

Gadimyxa atlanticaFishes ParasitesCompetitive BehaviorFishes DiseasesParasitic Diseases AnimalSpores Protozoandouble-label in situ hybridizationZoologyAquaculturehatchery rearedKidneyinnate and acquired immunityPolymerase Chain ReactionHost-Parasite InteractionsFish DiseasesZschokkella hildaeAnimalsGadusMyxozoaIn Situ HybridizationFish hatcheriesMyxozoabiologyHatchingEcologyAquatic animaldynamicsGadidaebiology.organism_classificationHatcherymixed infectionInfectious DiseasesPCRGadus morhuaAtlantic codGadimyxa atlanticaAnimal Science and ZoologyParasitologyAtlantic codcompetition
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Phage-borne factors and host LexA regulate the lytic switch in phage GIL01.

2011

ABSTRACT The Bacillus thuringiensis temperate phage GIL01 does not integrate into the host chromosome but exists stably as an independent linear replicon within the cell. Similar to that of the lambdoid prophages, the lytic cycle of GIL01 is induced as part of the cellular SOS response to DNA damage. However, no CI-like maintenance repressor has been detected in the phage genome, suggesting that GIL01 uses a novel mechanism to maintain lysogeny. To gain insights into the GIL01 regulatory circuit, we isolated and characterized a set of 17 clear plaque ( cp ) mutants that are unable to lysogenize. Two phage-encoded proteins, gp1 and gp7, are required for stable lysogen formation. Analysis of …

Gene Expression Regulation ViralvirusesBacteriophages Transposons and PlasmidsBacillus thuringiensisBacillus PhagesBiologyMicrobiologyHost-Parasite InteractionsBacteriolysisLysogenBacterial ProteinsLysogenic cycleHost chromosomeSOS responseSOS Response GeneticsMolecular BiologyLysogenyGeneticsBinding SitesSerine Endopeptidasesbiochemical phenomena metabolism and nutritionBacillus PhageTemperatenessLytic cycleDNA ViralbacteriaVirus ActivationRepressor lexAProtein BindingJournal of bacteriology
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Is the population genetic structure of complex life cycle parasites determined by the geographic range of the most motile host?

2010

Due to their particular way of life, dispersal of parasites is often mediated by their host's biology. Dispersal distance is relevant for parasites because high degree of dispersal leads to high gene flow, which counters the rate of parasite local adaptation in the host populations. Parasites with complex life cycles need to exploit sequentially more than one host species to complete their life cycle. Most trematode parasites have such complex life cycles involving invertebrate and vertebrate hosts. The spatial scales of invertebrate and vertebrate host populations are often different, which may decrease the probability that the parasite cycles locally in the intermediate host population. W…

Gene Flow0106 biological sciencesMicrobiology (medical)Population DynamicsPopulationZoologyTrematode InfectionsBiologyPolymerase Chain Reaction010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesMicrobiologyHost-Parasite InteractionsCharadriiformesFish Diseases03 medical and health sciencesGeneticsAnimalseducationMolecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsLymnaea030304 developmental biologyLocal adaptationIsolation by distanceLife Cycle Stages0303 health scienceseducation.field_of_studyPolymorphism GeneticBase SequenceGeographyBird DiseasesHost (biology)FishesIntermediate hostGenetic Variationbiology.organism_classificationObligate parasiteInfectious DiseasesBiological dispersalAnimal MigrationDNA IntergenicTrematodaTrematodaMicrosatellite RepeatsInfection, Genetics and Evolution
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Divergent Macroparasite Infections in Parapatric Swiss Lake-Stream Pairs of Threespine Stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus)

2015

Spatial heterogeneity in diversity and intensity of parasitism is a typical feature of most hostparasite interactions, but understanding of the evolutionary implications of such variation is limited. One possible outcome of infection heterogeneities is parasite-mediated divergent selection between host populations, ecotypes or species which may facilitate the process of ecological speciation. However, very few studies have described infections in populationpairs along the speciation continuum from low to moderate or high degree of genetic differentiation that would address the possibility of parasite-mediated divergent selection in the early stages of the speciation process. Here we provide…

Gene FlowGenetic SpeciationAllopatric speciationlcsh:MedicinePopulation geneticsGasterosteusParapatric speciationjärvetinfektiotEcological speciationHost-Parasite InteractionsFish DiseaseslakesAnimalsinfectionslcsh:ScienceEcosystemkolmipiikkiMultidisciplinarybiologylcsh:RSticklebackbiology.organism_classificationBiological EvolutionSmegmamorphaLakesGenetic SpeciationEvolutionary biologythreespine sticklebackta1181Macroparasite570 Life sciences; biologylcsh:QResearch ArticleMicrosatellite Repeats
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Horizontally transmitted parasitoid killing factor shapes insect defense to parasitoids

2021

Protection from parasitism by a virus Parasitoid wasps have developed myriad systems to overcome the defense mechanisms of their hosts as they lay their eggs in the bodies and eggs of targeted species. Gasmi et al . report how the host can fight back when infected by a virus that expresses a protein conferring resistance to the parasitoid. When members of the butterfly and moth family are targeted by wasps, a protein family has evolved that is horizontally carried by viruses—and sometimes is incorporated into the host genome—and impairs the ability of parasitoid offspring to fully develop and emerge. Characterizing the ability of this protein to protect hosts against specific parasites, the…

Gene Transfer Horizontalmedia_common.quotation_subjectGenome InsectWaspsZoologyParasitismApoptosisInsect VirusesInsectSpodopteraCompetition (biology)Host-Parasite InteractionsParasitoidLepidoptera genitaliaViral Proteins03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineEvolutionary arms raceAnimals030304 developmental biologymedia_common0303 health sciencesMultidisciplinarybiologyHost (biology)fungibiology.organism_classificationBiological EvolutionMicrogastrinaeNucleopolyhedrovirusesLepidopteraLarvaEntomopoxvirinaeInsect Proteins030217 neurology & neurosurgeryScience
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Larval morphology, genetic divergence, and contrasting levels of host manipulation between forms of Pomphorhynchus laevis (Acanthocephala)

2004

Studies on parasite species with a wide geographic and ecological range may be confounded by still equivocal taxonomic identification. Here, we investigated genetic polymorphism and behavioural changes induced in a common intermediate host, in two different forms of Pomphorhynchus laevis based on the morphology of the larval infective stage (cystacanth). A 'smooth type' (S) and a 'wrinkled type' (W) of cystacanth were distinguished based on their surface and shape. We analysed sequence divergence at both nuclear (ribosomal gene 18S rDNA, and ribosomal internal transcribed spacers, ITS1/ITS2) and mitochondrial (cytochrome c oxidase subunit 1) genes of P. laevis cystacanths and adults at vari…

GeneticsBase SequencebiologyMolecular Sequence DataIntermediate hostRibosomal RNAbiology.organism_classificationAcanthocephalaHost-Parasite InteractionsEvolution MolecularGenetic divergenceGammarus pulexInfectious DiseasesSpecies SpecificityEvolutionary biologyLarvabiology.proteinAnimalsCytochrome c oxidaseParasitologyPomphorhynchus laevisAcanthocephalaSequence AlignmentRibosomal DNAGenes HelminthInternational Journal for Parasitology
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Endoparasites of the blue whiting, Micromesistius poutassou from north-west Spain.

2005

AbstractThe communities of metazoan endoparasites of blue whiting, Micromesistius poutassou, in waters of north-west Spain were analysed and a geographical comparison made with other localities. Four hundred blue whiting collected in July 1999 and September 2000 were examined for parasites, excluding the head and gills. Six species were found: Anisakis simplex s.l. (L3), A. physeteris (L3), Hysterothylacium aduncum (L2 and L3), Stephanostomum lophii (metacercaria), S. pristis (adult), and Prosorhynchus crucibulum (metacercaria). The latter is a new host record, and A. physeteris is reported for the first time in blue whiting from the north-east Atlantic. Host gender was not a significant pr…

GillFood ChainbiologyNematodaEcologyFaunaAnisakis simplexFishesMicromesistiusGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationBlue whitingAnisakiasisHost-Parasite InteractionsFish DiseasesSpainHelminthsDominance (ecology)AnimalsAnimal Science and ZoologyParasitologySeawaterSpecies richnessNematode InfectionsEcosystemJournal of helminthology
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