نتایج جستجو برای: wolbachia

تعداد نتایج: 2901  

Journal: :Insect biochemistry and molecular biology 2014
Guangmei Zhang Mazhar Hussain Sassan Asgari

The gram-negative endosymbiotic bacteria, Wolbachia, have been found to colonize a wide range of invertebrates, including over 40% of insect species. Best known for host reproductive manipulations, some strains of Wolbachia have been shown to reduce the host life span by about 50% and inhibit replication and transmission of dengue virus (DENV) in the mosquito vector, Aedes aegypti. The molecula...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2017
Fabio M Gomes Bretta L Hixson Miles D W Tyner Jose Luis Ramirez Gaspar E Canepa Thiago Luiz Alves E Silva Alvaro Molina-Cruz Moussa Keita Fouseyni Kane Boïssé Traoré Nafomon Sogoba Carolina Barillas-Mury

A naturally occurring Wolbachia strain (wAnga-Mali) was identified in mosquitoes of the Anopheles gambiae complex collected in the Malian villages of Dangassa and Kenieroba. Phylogenetic analysis of the nucleotide sequence of two 16S rRNA regions showed that wAnga-Mali clusters with Wolbachia strains from supergroup A and has the highest homology to a Wolbachia strain isolated from cat fleas (C...

Journal: :Journal of invertebrate pathology 2001
T Rigaud P S Pennings P Juchault

Wolbachia bacteria are intracellular parasites, vertically transmitted from mothers to offspring through the cytoplasm of the eggs. They manipulate the reproduction of their hosts to increase in frequency in host populations. In terrestrial isopods for example, Wolbachia are responsible for the full feminization of putative males, therefore increasing the proportion of females, the sex by which...

2012
Laurence Mousson Karima Zouache Camilo Arias-Goeta Vincent Raquin Patrick Mavingui Anna-Bella Failloux

BACKGROUND The chikungunya (CHIK) outbreak that struck La Reunion Island in 2005 was preceded by few human cases of Dengue (DEN), but which surprisingly did not lead to an epidemic as might have been expected in a non-immune population. Both arboviral diseases are transmitted to humans by two main mosquito species, Aedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus. In the absence of the former, Ae. albopictus...

2014
Kerstin Fischer Wandy L. Beatty Gary J. Weil Peter U. Fischer

BACKGROUND Wolbachia α-proteobacteria are essential for growth, reproduction and survival for many filarial nematode parasites of medical and veterinary importance. Endobacteria were discovered in filarial parasites by transmission electron microscopy in the 1970's using chemically fixed specimens. Despite improvements of fixation and electron microscopy techniques during the last decades, meth...

2014
Michal Segoli Ary A. Hoffmann Jane Lloyd Gavin J. Omodei Scott A. Ritchie

BACKGROUND The bacterial endosymbiont Wolbachia blocks the transmission of dengue virus by its vector mosquito Aedes aegypti, and is currently being evaluated for control of dengue outbreaks. Wolbachia induces cytoplasmic incompatibility (CI) that results in the developmental failure of offspring in the cross between Wolbachia-infected males and uninfected females. This increases the relative s...

2018
Julie C Dunning Hotopp Lisa Klasson

In "Retrotransposons Are the Major Contributors to the Expansion of the Drosophila ananassae Muller F Element," Leung et al. (2017) improved contigs attributed to the Muller F element from the original CAF1 assembly, and used them to conclude that most of the sequence expansion of the fourth chromosome of D. ananassae is due to a higher transposon load than previously thought, but is not due to...

Journal: :The American naturalist 2002
Arndt Telschow Peter Hammerstein John H Werren

Wolbachia are intracellular bacteria that cause various reproduction alterations in their hosts, including cytoplasmic incompatibility (CI), an incompatibility between sperm and egg that typically results in embryonic death. We investigate theoretically the effects of Wolbachia-induced bidirectional CI on levels of divergence between two populations, where there is migration in both directions ...

2016
Amelia R I Lindsey John H Werren Stephen Richards Richard Stouthamer

Wolbachia is an intracellular symbiont of invertebrates responsible for inducing a wide variety of phenotypes in its host. These host-Wolbachia relationships span the continuum from reproductive parasitism to obligate mutualism, and provide a unique system to study genomic changes associated with the evolution of symbiosis. We present the genome sequence from a parthenogenesis-inducing Wolbachi...

2013
Guowu Bian Guoli Zhou Peng Lu Zhiyong Xi

Wolbachia is a maternally transmitted endosymbiotic bacterium that is estimated to infect up to 65% of insect species. The ability of Wolbachia to both induce pathogen interference and spread into mosquito vector populations makes it possible to develop Wolbachia as a biological control agent for vector-borne disease control. Although Wolbachia induces resistance to dengue virus (DENV), filaria...

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