92 research outputs found

    Virulence and Pathogen Multiplication: A Serial Passage Experiment in the Hypervirulent Bacterial Insect-Pathogen Xenorhabdus nematophila

    Get PDF
    The trade-off hypothesis proposes that the evolution of pathogens' virulence is shaped by a link between virulence and contagiousness. This link is often assumed to come from the fact that pathogens are contagious only if they can reach high parasitic load in the infected host. In this paper we present an experimental test of the hypothesis that selection on fast replication can affect virulence. In a serial passage experiment, we selected 80 lines of the bacterial insect-pathogen Xenorhabdus nematophila to multiply fast in an artificial culture medium. This selection resulted in shortened lag phase in our selected bacteria. We then injected these bacteria into insects and observed an increase in virulence. This could be taken as a sign that virulence in Xenorhabdus is linked to fast multiplication. But we found, among the selected lineages, either no link or a positive correlation between lag duration and virulence: the most virulent bacteria were the last to start multiplying. We then surveyed phenotypes that are under the control of the flhDC super regulon, which has been shown to be involved in Xenorhabdus virulence. We found that, in one treatment, the flhDC regulon has evolved rapidly, but that the changes we observed were not connected to virulence. All together, these results indicate that virulence is, in Xenorhabdus as in many other pathogens, a multifactorial trait. Being able to grow fast is one way to be virulent. But other ways exist which renders the evolution of virulence hard to predict

    The insect pathogenic bacterium Xenorhabdus innexi has attenuated virulence in multiple insect model hosts yet encodes a potent mosquitocidal toxin

    Get PDF

    Changing the Allocation Rules in the EU ETS: Impact on Competitiveness and Economic Efficiency

    Full text link

    Swarming and Swimming Changes Concomitant with Phase Variation in Xenorhabdus nematophilus

    No full text
    Xenorhabdus spp., entomopathogenic bacteria symbiotically associated with nematodes of the family Steinernematidae, occur spontaneously in two phases. Phase I, the variant naturally isolated from the infective-stage nematode, provides better conditions than the phase II variant for nematode reproduction. This study has shown that Xenorhabdus phase I variants displayed a swarming motility when they were grown on a suitable solid medium (0.6 to 1.2% agar). Whereas most of the phase I variants from different Xenorhabdus spp. were able to undergo cycle of rapid and coordinately population migration over the surface, phase II variants were unable to swarm and even to swim in semisolid agar, particularly in X. nematophilus. Optical and electron microscopic observations showed nonmotile cells with phase II variants of X. nematophilus F1 which lost their flagella. Flagellar filaments from strain F1 phase I variants were purified, and the molecular mass of the flagellar structural subunit was estimated by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis to be 36.5 kDa. Flagellin from cellular extracts or culture medium of phase II was undetectable with antiserum against the denatured flagellin by immunoblotting analysis. This suggests that the lack of flagella in phase II cells is due to a defect during flagellin synthesis. The importance of such a difference of motility between both phases is discussed in regard to adaptation of these bacteria to the insect prey and the nematode host
    corecore