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Journal ArticleDOI

Facultative Symbionts in Aphids and the Horizontal Transfer of Ecologically Important Traits

TLDR
Experiments on pea aphids have demonstrated that facultative symbionts protect against entomopathogenic fungi and parasitoid wasps, ameliorate the detrimental effects of heat, and influence host plant suitability.
Abstract
Aphids engage in symbiotic associations with a diverse assemblage of heritable bacteria. In addition to their obligate nutrient-provisioning symbiont, Buchnera aphidicola, aphids may also carry one or more facultative symbionts. Unlike obligate symbionts, facultative symbionts are not generally required for survival or reproduction and can invade novel hosts, based on both phylogenetic analyses and transfection experiments. Facultative symbionts are mutualistic in the context of various ecological interactions. Experiments on pea aphids (Acyrthosiphon pisum) have demonstrated that facultative symbionts protect against entomopathogenic fungi and parasitoid wasps, ameliorate the detrimental effects of heat, and influence host plant suitability. The protective symbiont, Hamiltonella defensa, has a dynamic genome, exhibiting evidence of recombination, phage-mediated gene uptake, and horizontal gene transfer and containing virulence and toxin-encoding genes. Although transmitted maternally with high fidelity, facultative symbionts occasionally move horizontally within and between species, resulting in the instantaneous acquisition of ecologically important traits, such as parasitoid defense.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Cytotype Affects the Capability of the Whitefly Bemisia tabaci MED Species To Feed and Oviposit on an Unfavorable Host Plant.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors compare the phenotypic and metabolic responses of three Bemisia tabaci lines, reared on three different host plants, hibiscus, tobacco, or lantana, and address whether and how S-symbionts influence insect capacity to feed and produce offspring on those plants.
Journal ArticleDOI

Simulated extreme high temperatures alter the demographic parameters of Aphelinus asychis and diminish parasitoid fitness

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors constructed four EHT regimes simulating EHTs of two different amplitudes (34 or 38 °C peak temperature) and frequencies (one or five peak temperature days every ten days).

PERSPECTIVE Mutualisms in a changing world: an evolutionary perspective

TL;DR: In this article, the authors developed an evolutionary perspective on mutualism breakdown to complement the ecological perspective, by focusing on three processes: (1) shifts from mutualism to antagonism, (2) switches to novel partners and (3) mutualism abandonment.
Journal ArticleDOI

Addressing the challenges of symbiont-mediated RNAi in aphids

TL;DR: It is found that smRNAi was not a reliable method for aphid gene knockdown under the authors' conditions, and the possible avenues through which sm RNAi, and aphid RNAi in general, could be improved in the future are discussed.
References
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Book

Parasitoids: Behavioral and Evolutionary Ecology

TL;DR: This book synthesizes the work of both schools of parasitoid biology and asks how a consideration of evolutionary biology can help to understand the behavior, ecology, and diversity of the approximately one to two million species of Parasitoids found on earth.
Journal ArticleDOI

Genomics and Evolution of Heritable Bacterial Symbionts

TL;DR: Insect heritable symbionts provide some of the extremes of cellular genomes, including the smallest and the fastest evolving, raising new questions about the limits of evolution of life.
Book

Evolution of sex determining mechanisms

James J. Bull
TL;DR: Books, as a source that may involve the facts, opinion, literature, religion, and many others are the great friends to join with.
Journal ArticleDOI

Type III Secretion Machines: Bacterial Devices for Protein Delivery into Host Cells

TL;DR: Several Gram-negative pathogenic bacteria have evolved a complex protein secretion system termed type III to deliver bacterial effector proteins into host cells that then modulate host cellular functions.
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