نتایج جستجو برای: wolbachia pipientis

تعداد نتایج: 2905  

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2001
E Zchori-Fein Y Gottlieb S E Kelly J K Brown J M Wilson T L Karr M S Hunter

The symbiotic bacterium Wolbachia pipientis has been considered unique in its ability to cause multiple reproductive anomalies in its arthropod hosts. Here we report that an undescribed bacterium is vertically transmitted and associated with thelytokous parthenogenetic reproduction in Encarsia, a genus of parasitoid wasps. Although Wolbachia was found in only one of seven parthenogenetic Encars...

Journal: :Insect molecular biology 2007
Y O Sanogo S L Dobson S R Bordenstein R J Novak

Culex pipiens quinquefasciatus Say and Culex pipiens pipiens Linnaeus are sibling species incriminated as important vectors of emerging and re-emerging infectious diseases worldwide. The two forms differ little morphologically and are differentiated mainly based upon ecological, behavioural, physiological and genetic traits. Within the North American zone of sympatry, populations of Cx. p. quin...

2015
Irene L. G. Newton Oleksandr Savytskyy Kathy B. Sheehan

Wolbachia pipientis is a ubiquitous, maternally transmitted bacterium that infects the germline of insect hosts. Estimates are that Wolbachia infect nearly 40% of insect species on the planet, making it the most prevalent infection on Earth. The bacterium, infamous for the reproductive phenotypes it induces in arthropod hosts, has risen to recent prominence due to its use in vector control. Wol...

2014
Daniel P. LePage Kristin K. Jernigan Seth R. Bordenstein

Wolbachia pipientis is a worldwide bacterial parasite of arthropods that infects germline cells and manipulates host reproduction to increase the ratio of infected females, the transmitting sex of the bacteria. The most common reproductive manipulation, cytoplasmic incompatibility (CI), is expressed as embryonic death in crosses between infected males and uninfected females. Specifically, Wolba...

2011
Brian Dempsey

Wolbachia pipientis are endosymbionts that infect many insects, arachnids, and nematodes. By comparing the Wolbachia DNA sequences contained in different infected insect species, one can investigate the evolutionary history of arthropods and the modes of transmission of this reproductive parasite. We collected and extracted DNA from several mosquito species to test for the presence of Wolbachia...

Journal: :Molecular Biology and Evolution 2008
Lisa Klasson Thomas Walker Mohammed Sebaihia Mandy J. Sanders Michael A. Quail Angela Lord Susanne Sanders Julie Earl Scott L. O'Neill Nicholas Thomson Steven P. Sinkins Julian Parkhill

The obligate intracellular bacterium Wolbachia pipientis strain wPip induces cytoplasmic incompatibility (CI), patterns of crossing sterility, in the Culex pipiens group of mosquitoes. The complete sequence is presented of the 1.48-Mbp genome of wPip which encodes 1386 coding sequences (CDSs), representing the first genome sequence of a B-supergroup Wolbachia. Comparisons were made with the sma...

2015
Jae Young Choi Jaclyn E. Bubnell Charles F. Aquadro

Coevolution between Drosophila and its endosymbiont Wolbachia pipientis has many intriguing aspects. For example, Drosophila ananassae hosts two forms of W. pipientis genomes: One being the infectious bacterial genome and the other integrated into the host nuclear genome. Here, we characterize the infectious and integrated genomes of W. pipientis infecting D. ananassae (wAna), by genome sequenc...

2016
Hilaria E. Amuzu Elizabeth A. McGraw

BACKGROUND Dengue fever, caused by the dengue virus (DENV), is now the most common arbovirus transmitted disease globally. One novel approach to control DENV is to use the endosymbiotic bacterium, Wolbachia pipientis, to limit DENV replication inside the primary mosquito vector, Aedes aegypti. Wolbachia that is naturally present in a range of insects reduces the capacity for viruses, bacteria, ...

2012
Thomas Penz Stephan Schmitz-Esser Suzanne E. Kelly Bodil N. Cass Anneliese Müller Tanja Woyke Stephanie A. Malfatti Martha S. Hunter Matthias Horn

Terrestrial arthropods are commonly infected with maternally inherited bacterial symbionts that cause cytoplasmic incompatibility (CI). In CI, the outcome of crosses between symbiont-infected males and uninfected females is reproductive failure, increasing the relative fitness of infected females and leading to spread of the symbiont in the host population. CI symbionts have profound impacts on...

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