3 research outputs found

    Aphid-plant interactions and the possible role of an endosymbiont in aphid biotype development

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    Diuraphis noxia Kurdjumov (Hemiptera: Aphididae: Macrosiphini) is a major agricultural pest that causes extensive economic losses to the wheat and barley industries. Resistant cultivars were relatively successful in controlling this pest until the recent development of new D. noxia (Russian wheat aphid, RWA) biotypes. The aim was to investigate the role of the aphid endosymbiont, Buchnera aphidicola, in the RWA-host interaction. It was hypothesized that variations in the endosymbiont’s key essential amino acid biosynthetic pathway genes, their copy numbers, and/or expression levels, maybe a determining factor influence the RWA’s success in the aphid-host interaction. Aphid symbiont species content, key essential amino acid biosynthetic gene variation, plasmid copy numbers and expression levels of ten different RWA biotypes were determined, using DGGE, RT-PCR, RT-qPCR, 5’-RACE and sequencing. The RWA biotypes were shown to be monosymbiotic, with plasmid copy numbers varying between biotypes. Only a single CCC-insert in a non-coding region of the leucine plasmid differed between the biotypes. Similar variations were identified in the family Aphididae, suggesting a regulatory function for this region. The presence of this CCC-insert in a plasmid led to an increase in the leader sequence length of the leuA gene. The insert may also have a functional role through gene regulation, since it increased the expression levels of subsequent genes (leuA and leuB). An endosymbiont that upgrade the host’s diet with the required essential amino acids will be beneficial to RWAs when feeding on resistant wheat cultivars as it will enhance aphid fitness. This suggests selective pressure of resistant wheat cultivars on the aphid, i.e. the incapability to change resistant cultivar essential amino acid content, could select for individuals with beneficial endosymbionts. B. aphidicola could therefore play a role in the development of RWA biotypes. The influences that statistical normalization methods have on the final identification of differentially regulated Affymetrix probe sets in RWA-plant interactions were also investigated. The hypothesis was that a subset of the probe sets determined as differentially regulated would be consistent, regardless of the normalization and background method utilized, if all the other analyses are kept constant. This subset would be normalization-method-independent. The data of two Affymetrix RWA-plant interaction experiments were analyzed with five different normalization and background correcting methods and at three different confidence levels, with the results subjected to FDR and FWER correction algorithms. The results showed that on average a third of the regulated genes were only selected after normalization by a single method and that the total number of genes deemed regulated was highly normalization method dependent. Normalization-method-biases could also not be countered by increased confidence levels and these biases eventually determined the probe sets deemed differentially regulated, even after FDR and FWER corrections. Both these strategies actually increased normalization-method-biases and these could only be corrected by using multiple normalization methods to identify the normalization-method-biases-independent probe set subset.Thesis (PhD)--University of Pretoria, 2011.Geneticsunrestricte

    Diversity and population structure of Clivia miniata Lindl. (amaryllidacea) : evidence from molecular genetics and ecology

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    Please read the abstract (Summary) in the section 00front of this documentDissertation (MSc (Botany))--University of Pretoria, 2005.Plant Scienceunrestricte

    Transcript profiling of wheat genes expressed during feeding by two different biotypes of Diuraphis noxia

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    Diuraphis noxia (Kurdjumov)(Russian wheat aphid) has severe economic impacts on wheat and barley production in the United States. The interaction between the Russian wheat aphid and its cereal hosts is poorly understood. However, the recent appearance of new biotypes in the United States showed that specific interactions exist between wheat resistance loci and Russian wheat aphid biotypes. At present, Dn7 is the only known gene in hexaploid wheat that confers resistance against all U.S. Russian wheat aphid biotypes. This study was conducted to investigate the molecular mechanism of Dn7-mediated resistance against two U.S. Russian wheat aphid biotypes (Russian wheat aphid 1 and Russian wheat aphid 2). Using GeneChip Wheat Genome Arrays, we compared transcript profiles of resistant and susceptible lines infested with either Russian wheat aphid 1 or Russian wheat aphid 2 using two time intervals (5 and 48 h after infestation). Russian wheat aphid feeding on hexaploid wheat led to the induction of groups of genes functioning in oxidative and general stress, photosynthesis, cell respiration and energy production, signal transduction, calcium- dependent signaling, pathogenesis related (PR) responses, and defense compound synthesis. The number of differentially expressed genes was higher in plants infested with Russian wheat aphid 1 compared with those infested with Russian wheat aphid 2. Although most genes involved in basic cellular functions were shared, unique genes were also obtained. This finding may indicate subtle differences in genes induced in response to different virulence proteins
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