نتایج جستجو برای: wolbachia is an intracellular endosymbiont

تعداد نتایج: 9196401  

Journal: :PLoS Pathogens 2006
Seth R Bordenstein Michelle L Marshall Adam J Fry Ulandt Kim Jennifer J Wernegreen

By manipulating arthropod reproduction worldwide, the heritable endosymbiont Wolbachia has spread to pandemic levels. Little is known about the microbial basis of cytoplasmic incompatibility (CI) except that bacterial densities and percentages of infected sperm cysts associate with incompatibility strength. The recent discovery of a temperate bacteriophage (WO-B) of Wolbachia containing ankyrin...

2015
Minoru Moriyama Naruo Nikoh Takahiro Hosokawa Takema Fukatsu

UNLABELLED Endosymbiotic bacteria of the genus Wolbachia represent the most successful symbiotic bacteria in the terrestrial ecosystem. The success of Wolbachia has been ascribed to its remarkable phenotypic effects on host reproduction, such as cytoplasmic incompatibility, whereby maternally inherited bacteria can spread in their host populations at the expense of their host's fitness. Meanwhi...

Journal: :Proceedings. Biological sciences 2012
Olivier Duron Jennifer Bernard Célestine M Atyame Emilie Dumas Mylène Weill

In most insects, the endosymbiont Wolbachia induces cytoplasmic incompatibility (CI), an embryonic mortality observed when infected males mate either with uninfected females or with females infected by an incompatible Wolbachia strain. Although the molecular mechanism of CI remains elusive, it is classically viewed as a modification-rescue model, in which a Wolbachia mod function disables the r...

2011
Ilaria Negri

Wolbachia pipientis is a widespread endosymbiont of filarial nematodes and arthropods. While in worms the symbiosis is obligate, in arthropods Wolbachia induces several reproductive manipulations (i.e., cytoplasmic incompatibility, parthenogenesis, feminization of genetic males, and male-killing) in order to increase the number of infected females. These various phenotypic effects may be linked...

Journal: :Microbiology research 2021

Bacteria of the genus Wolbachia are widely distributed in arthropods, particularly ants; nevertheless, it is still little explored with Multilocus Sequence Typing (MLST) methodology, especially Solenopsis, which includes species native to South America. Ants from this have a cosmopolitan way some them being In Brazil, they spread and preferentially associated areas human activity. This study ai...

2016
Claudia C. Correa J. W. O. Ballard

Wolbachia are intracellular, maternally inherited bacteria with an impressive history of adaptation to intracellular lifestyles. Instead of adapting to a single host lineage, Wolbachia evolved ways to jump across host species and establish relatively stable associations maintained through vertical transmission. Wolbachia are capable of manipulating the reproduction of infected hosts in a remark...

Journal: :Evolution; international journal of organic evolution 2005
Kelly A Dyer John Jaenike

The mode and tempo of host-parasite evolution depend on population structure and history and the strength of selection that the species exert on each other. Here we genetically and epidemiologically characterize populations of the mycophagous fly Drosophila innubila and its male-killing Wolbachia endosymbiont, with the aim of integrating the local through global nature of this association. Dros...

2015
Julien Martinez Suzan Ok Sophie Smith Kiana Snoeck Jon P. Day Francis M. Jiggins Elizabeth Ann McGraw

Symbionts can have mutualistic effects that increase their host's fitness and/or parasitic effects that reduce it. Which of these strategies evolves depends in part on the balance of their costs and benefits to the symbiont. We have examined these questions in Wolbachia, a vertically transmitted endosymbiont of insects that can provide protection against viral infection and/or parasitically man...

2012
Christelle Godel Sujai Kumar Georgios Koutsovoulos Philipp Ludin Daniel Nilsson Francesco Comandatore Nicola Wrobel Marian Thompson Christoph D. Schmid Susumu Goto Frédéric Bringaud Adrian Wolstenholme Claudio Bandi Christian Epe Ronald Kaminsky Mark Blaxter Pascal Mäser

The heartworm Dirofilaria immitis is an important parasite of dogs. Transmitted by mosquitoes in warmer climatic zones, it is spreading across southern Europe and the Americas at an alarming pace. There is no vaccine, and chemotherapy is prone to complications. To learn more about this parasite, we have sequenced the genomes of D. immitis and its endosymbiont Wolbachia. We predict 10,179 protei...

Journal: :The Journal of Experimental Medicine 2000
Mark J. Taylor Helen F. Cross Katja Bilo

The pathogenesis of filarial disease is characterized by acute and chronic inflammation. Inflammatory responses are thought to be generated by either the parasite, the immune response, or opportunistic infection. We show that soluble extracts of the human filarial parasite Brugia malayi can induce potent inflammatory responses, including tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha, interleukin (IL)-1beta...

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