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Program > Browse abstracts by author > Parisot Nicolas

Aphid defense strategies, symbiotic dynamics and the role of transposable elements in parasitoid interactions
Mariane Possignolo Gomes  1, 2@  , Fernando Consoli  1  , Nicolas Parisot  2  , Tobias Baril  3  , Clément Goubert  4  , Rita Rebollo  2  
1 : Insect Interactions (IILAB), Luiz de Queiroz College of Agriculture (ESALQ/USP)
Escola Superior de Agricultura "Luiz de Queiroz" Avenida Pádua Dias, 11 - Piracicaba/SP - CEP 13418-900 -  Brazil
2 : INRAE, INSA Lyon, BF2I, UMR203
Univ Lyon, INRAE, INSA Lyon, BF2I, UMR 203, F-69621, Villeurbanne, France
69621 Villeurbanne -  France
3 : Centre for Ecology and Conservation
School of Biosciences College of Life and Environmental Sciences Tremough Campus Penryn Cornwall TR10 9EZ -  United Kingdom
4 : Canadian Center for Computacional Genomics, McGill University
Montreal, Québec -  Canada

Parasitoids exert strong selective pressure on their hosts, leading to the evolution of defensive traits in aphids to thwart successful parasitism. The interplay of symbiotic associations also influences the evolution of defenses against natural enemies. Parasitism experiments with Diaeretiella rapae and Myzus persicae aphid isolines, infected or not with the secondary symbiont Rickettsia, showed variable parasitism success rates ranging from 43% to 76%. Six M. persicae isolines (three with high parasitism rate; three with low parasitism rate) were selected for biological analysis and evaluation of parasitoid behavior during patch exploitation and aphid defensive behavior during parasitoid interactions. Biological parameters revealed remarkable differences among M. persicae isolines, which responded differently to parasitism, suggesting potential adaptive costs associated with lower parasitism rates. Furthermore, it was observed that the secondary symbiont Rickettsia does not confer additional defense mechanisms to M. persicae against D. rapae. Behavioral studies revealed differences in the occurrence of host evaluation between low and high parasitism isolines. Specifically, the presence of Rickettsia was found to affect the defensive behavior of M. persicae in response to parasitoid attack, thereby interfering with the host selection process of the parasitoid D. rapae. Phenotypic differences observed in response to parasitism by D. rapae in the M. persicae isolines studied, as well as in biological and behavioral assays, could be attributed to genetic variability. We hypothesize that transposable elements (TEs) might be involved as a selective force and contribute to the accumulation of mutations within the host, and potentially assist in host defense responses. Therefore, the aim of our research was to detect and annote TEs in the six different clonal lines, and to verify whether they are associated with genes involved in host immune responses against the presence of macro-invaders, such as parasitoids.


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