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Status |
Public on Jun 02, 2020 |
Title |
Immunogenetic and tolerance strategies against a novel parasitoid of wild field crickets |
Organism |
Teleogryllus oceanicus |
Experiment type |
Expression profiling by high throughput sequencing
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Summary |
Among the parasites of insects, endoparasitoids impose a costly challenge to host defenses because they use their host’s body for the development and maturation of their eggs or larvae, and ultimately kill the host. Tachinid flies are highly specialized acoustically-orienting parasitoids that release first instar mobile larvae which burrow into the host’s body to feed. We investigated the possibility that Teleogryllus oceanicus field crickets employ post-infestation strategies to maximize survival when infested with the larvae of the parasitoid fly Ormia ochracea. Using crickets from the Hawaiian island of Kauai, where the parasitoid is present, and crickets from the Cook Islands (Mangaia), where the parasitoid is absent, we evaluated fitness consequences of infestation by comparing feeding behavior, reproductive capacity, and survival of males experimentally infested with O. ochracea larvae. We also evaluated genetic mechanisms underlying host responses by comparing gene expression in crickets infested with fly larvae for different lengths of time with that of uninfested control crickets. We observe some differences in fitness (spermatophore production) and survival (total survival time post-infestation) between populations. However, for both traits significant population effects 1) were not associated with the slope of the response to different numbers of larvae and 2) only emerged from models containing body condition at one but not both time points evaluated. Gene expression patterns also revealed population differences in response to infestation. We did not find evidence for consistent differences in genes associated with immunity or stress response. Taken together, these results suggest that coevolution with the fly does not strongly select for either post-infestation resistance or tolerance of parasitoid larvae in male crickets.
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Overall design |
Unstranded mRNA profiles from two populations of Teleogryllus oceanicus. Abdominal tissue was collected from control crickets and from crickets 4 or 7 days after artifical infestation with larvae of the parasitoid fly Ormia ochracea. 6 individuals from each treatment group (control, 4 days, or 7 days post-infestation) from each population (Mangaia or Kauai) were included in this study.
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Contributor(s) |
Sikkink KL, Bailey NW, Zuk M, Balenger SL |
Citation(s) |
33304539 |
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Submission date |
Jun 01, 2020 |
Last update date |
Dec 15, 2020 |
Contact name |
Kristin L Sikkink |
Organization name |
University of Minnesota
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Department |
Ecology, Evolution, and Behavior
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Lab |
Emilie Snell-Rood
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Street address |
1987 Upper Buford Circle
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City |
Saint Paul |
State/province |
MN |
ZIP/Postal code |
55108 |
Country |
USA |
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Platforms (1) |
GPL28608 |
Illumina HiSeq 2000 (Teleogryllus oceanicus) |
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Samples (18)
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Relations |
BioProject |
PRJNA636298 |
SRA |
SRP265462 |