Search results for "wolbachia"

showing 10 items of 45 documents

Forward genetics inWolbachia: Regulation ofWolbachiaproliferation by the amplification and deletion of an addictive genomic island

2021

Copyright: © 2021 Duarte et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.

MaleLife CyclesCancer ResearchPhysiologyEggsMutantForward geneticsQH426-470LarvaeReproductive PhysiologyTiter regulationGenomic islandreproductive and urinary physiologyGenetics (clinical)Gene EditingGenetics0303 health sciencesbiologyEukaryotaAnimal ModelsGenomicsPhenotype3. Good healthInsectsPhenotypeDrosophila melanogasterExperimental Organism SystemsDicistroviridaeOctomomFemaleDrosophilaWolbachiaDrosophila melanogasterWolbachiaResearch ArticleGenomic IslandsArthropodaLongevityGenomicsResearch and Analysis MethodsInvertebrate genomics03 medical and health sciencesModel Organismsparasitic diseasesGeneticsAnimalsSymbiosisMolecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics030304 developmental biologyBacteria030306 microbiologyHost (biology)OrganismsBiology and Life SciencesSingle nucleotide polymorphismsbiochemical phenomena metabolism and nutritionbiology.organism_classificationInvertebratesBacterial LoadForward geneticsAnimal GenomicsAnimal StudiesbacteriaZoologyEntomologyGenome BacterialDevelopmental BiologyGenetic screen
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Mitochondrial DNA effects on fitness in Drosophila subobscura

2011

We tested different fitness components on a series of conspecific mtDNA haplotypes, detected by RFLPs in Drosophila subobscura. Additionally, haplotype VIII, endemic to the Canary Islands, was tested upon its own native nuclear DNA background and upon that of the rest of mtDNAs tested herein. We found that both nuclear and mitochondrial DNA can have a significant effect upon their hosts' fitness, and that negative selection is one of the mechanisms that can intervene in this species' mtDNA haplotype pattern. We discuss the importance of this mechanism in relation to genetic drift, in the form of periodic population bottlenecks, and how the latter can enhance the former. We also detected a s…

MaleMitochondrial DNALongevityGenetic FitnessBiologyDNA MitochondrialGenetic driftGenetic variationHybrid VigorGeneticsAnimalsSelection GeneticGenetics (clinical)Cell NucleusGeneticsGenetic DriftHaplotypeGenetic VariationDrosophila subobscuraNuclear DNAFertilityHaplotypesSpainEvolutionary biologyMutationOriginal ArticleDrosophilaFemaleGenetic FitnessRestriction fragment length polymorphismWolbachiaHeredity
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A cost of Wolbachia-induced sex reversal and female-biased sex ratios: decrease in female fertility after sperm depletion in a terrestrial isopod.

2004

A number of parasites are vertically transmitted to new host generations via female eggs. In such cases, host reproduction is an intimate component of parasite fitness and no cost of the infection on host reproduction is expected to evolve. A number of these parasites distort host sex ratios towards females, thereby increasing either parasite fitness or the proportion of the host that transmit the parasite. In terrestrial isopods (woodlice), Wolbachia bacteria are responsible for sex reversion and female-biased sex ratios, changing genetic males into functional neo-females. Although sex ratio distortion is a powerful means for parasites to increase in frequency in host populations, it also …

MaleWoodlousemedia_common.quotation_subjectZoologyFertilityGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyAnimalsHermaphroditic OrganismsSex RatioMatingGeneral Environmental Sciencemedia_commonArmadillidium vulgareAnalysis of Variance[SDV.GEN.GPO]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Genetics/Populations and Evolution [q-bio.PE]General Immunology and MicrobiologybiologySperm CountEcologyGeneral MedicineSex reversalSex Determination Processesbiology.organism_classificationSpermSpermatozoa[SDE.BE] Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and EcologyFertility[SDV.GEN.GPO] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Genetics/Populations and Evolution [q-bio.PE]WolbachiaFemale[SDE.BE]Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and EcologyGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesSex ratioWolbachiaResearch ArticleIsopoda
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Low Levels of Mitochondrial DNA and Symbiont Diversity in the Worldwide Agricultural Pest, the Greenhouse Whitefly Trialeurodes vaporariorum (Hemipte…

2015

Trialeurodes vaporariorum, the greenhouse whitefly, is a cosmopolitan agricultural pest. Little is known about the genetic diversity of T. vaporariorum and the bacterial symbionts associated with this species. Here, we undertook a large phylogeographic study by investigating both the mitochondrial (mt) diversity and the infection status of 38 T. vaporariorum collections from 18 countries around the world. Genetic diversity of T. vaporariorum was studied by analyzing sequence data from the mt cytochrome oxidase I, cytochrome b, and NADH dehydrogenase subunit 5 genes. Maximum-likelihood (ML) phylogeny reconstruction delineated 2 clades characterized by limited sequence divergence: one clade c…

Malefood.ingredientArsenophonusMolecular Sequence DataZoologyTrialeurodesDNA MitochondrialHemipterafoodSpecies SpecificityGenetic variationBotanyGeneticsAnimalssymbiont communitiesSymbiosisMolecular BiologyPhylogenyGenetics (clinical)ta415Likelihood FunctionsGenetic diversityBacteriaBase SequenceModels GeneticbiologyCytochrome bta1184mtDNA polymorphismGenetic VariationGreenhouse whiteflygenetic diversitySequence Analysis DNAbiology.organism_classificationPhylogeographyta1181Multilocus sequence typingFemaleWolbachiaArsenophonusAnimal DistributionBiotechnologyJournal of Heredity
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Fitness and life-history traits of the two major mitochondrial DNA haplotypes of Drosophila subobscura

2004

Mitochondrial DNA restriction site analyses on natural populations of Drosophila subobscura have proved the existence of two common, coexisting haplotypes (I and II), as well as a set of less frequent ones derived from them. To explain this distribution, experiments to date point practically to all possible genetic mechanisms being involved in the changes of gene frequencies (cytonuclear coadaptation, direct natural selection on mtDNA and genetic drift). In an attempt to find differences that help to understand the dynamics of these haplotypes and to detect the effect of selection, we measured certain fitness components and life-history traits (egg-larva and larva-adult viabilities and deve…

Mitochondrial DNAmedia_common.quotation_subjectLongevityRestriction MappingPopulationBiologyDNA MitochondrialPolymerase Chain ReactionQuantitative Trait HeritableGenetic driftGeneticsAnimalsSelection GeneticeducationGenetics (clinical)Selection (genetic algorithm)media_commonTissue SurvivalGeneticseducation.field_of_studyNatural selectionHaplotypeLongevityDrosophila subobscuraHaplotypesEvolutionary biologyLarvaDrosophilaWolbachiaHeredity
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Genomic Changes in Bacteria: From Free-Living to Endosymbiotic Life

2007

Symbiosis is the association between two or more distinct organisms during at least one part of their lifecycle. Although this term is sometimes used in a narrower sense, it includes for most authors a set of different situations such as mutualism, parasitism and commensalism. Mutualism is defined as an association in which both partners derive benefit from living together. Parasitism is an association in which one of the partners benefits, while the other is harmed. Finally, commensalism is an association in which one of the two members benefits while the other is neither harmed nor obtains an advantage. In most cases, the association is established between a pluricellular eukaryote and a …

Mutualism (biology)GeneticsbiologyEndosymbiosisObligateBacteriocytefungiBacteriomebiochemical phenomena metabolism and nutritionbiology.organism_classificationCommensalismSymbiosisBotanybacteriaWolbachia
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PARASITES AND SEXUAL REPRODUCTION IN PSYCHID MOTHS

2004

Persistence of sexual reproduction among coexisting asexual competitors has been a major paradox in evolutionary biology. The number of empirical studies is still very limited, as few systems with coexisting sexual and strictly asexual lineages have been found. We studied the ecological mechanisms behind the simultaneous coexistence of a sexually and an asexually reproducing closely related species of psychid moth in Central Finland between 1999 and 2001. The two species compete for the same resources and are often infected by the same hymenopteran parasitoids. They are extremely morphologically and behaviorally similar and can be separated only by their reproductive strategy (sexual vs. as…

OffspringZoologyMothsModels BiologicalParasitoidGeneticsAnimalsBody Weights and MeasuresFinlandEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsAnalysis of VarianceLarvabiologyEcologyReproductionfungiParthenogenesisbiology.organism_classificationSexual reproductionFertilityGenetic markerRed Queen hypothesisFemaleSexWolbachiaGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesEvolution
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Diversity and composition of the microbiome associated with eggs of the Southern green stinkbug, Nezara viridula (Hemiptera: Pentatomidae).

2022

Although microbial communities of insects from larval to adult stage have been increasingly investigated in recent years, little is still known about the diversity and composition of egg-associated microbiomes. In this study, we used high-throughput amplicon sequencing and quantitative PCR to get a better understanding of the microbiome of insect eggs and how they are established using the Southern green stinkbug Nezara viridula (L.) (Hemiptera: Pentatomidae) as a study object. First, to determine the bacterial community composition, egg masses from two natural populations in Belgium and Italy were examined. Subsequently, microbial community establishment was assessed by studying stinkbug e…

Science & TechnologyPantoeaSodalisSYMBIOSISINSECTSMicrobiologysymbiontSettore AGR/11 - Entomologia Generale E ApplicataPentatomidaeGUTWOLBACHIASodalimicrobial communityLife Sciences & BiomedicineVERTICAL TRANSMISSIONMicrobiologyOpenREFERENCES
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How do Wolbachia Symbionts Increase the Proportion of Females in Their Hosts?

2001

Sexual differentiationEcologyZoologyWolbachiaBiologybiology.organism_classificationSex ratioCytoplasmic incompatibility
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Genetic variation in the primary sex ratio in populations of the intertidal copepod, Tigriopus californicus, is widespread on Vancouver Island.

2011

Hypothesis: Genetic variation for the primary sex ratio is widespread in a copepodwith polygenic sex determination. Cytoplasmic sex ratio distorters (e.g. Wolbachia andmicrosporidians) influence the primary sex ratio in this copepod. Organism: The intertidal copepod, Tigriopus californicus; six populations from VancouverIsland, British Columbia. Study site: Quantitative genetics experiment in the laboratory. PCR and antibioticsexperiment to test for the presence of cytoplasmic sex ratio distorters. Results: Genetic variation for the primary sex ratio was found in five of the six populationssurveyed. The primary sex ratio was paternally transmitted. There was no evidence thatWolbachia or mic…

[ SDE.BE ] Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and Ecologycopepodfungipolygenic sex determination[ SDV.GEN.GA ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Genetics/Animal genetics[SDV.GEN.GA] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Genetics/Animal geneticsheritability[ SDV.EE.ECO ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Ecology environment/EcosystemsWolbachia.primary sex ratioparasitic diseases[SDV.BA.ZI] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Animal biology/Invertebrate Zoology[SDV.GEN.GPO] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Genetics/Populations and Evolution [q-bio.PE]microsporidiacytoplasmic sex ratio distortersTigriopus californicusRifampin[ SDV.BBM ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Biochemistry Molecular BiologyWolbachiacytoplasmic feminizers
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