Horizontally transmitted parasitoid killing factor shapes insect defense to parasitoids
Parasitoid wasps have developed myriad systems to overcome the defense mechanisms of their hosts as they lay their eggs in the bodies and eggs of targeted species. Gasmi et al . report how the host can fight back when infected by a virus that expresses a protein conferring resistance to the parasito...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Science (American Association for the Advancement of Science) 2021-07, Vol.373 (6554), p.535-541 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Parasitoid wasps have developed myriad systems to overcome the defense mechanisms of their hosts as they lay their eggs in the bodies and eggs of targeted species. Gasmi
et al
. report how the host can fight back when infected by a virus that expresses a protein conferring resistance to the parasitoid. When members of the butterfly and moth family are targeted by wasps, a protein family has evolved that is horizontally carried by viruses—and sometimes is incorporated into the host genome—and impairs the ability of parasitoid offspring to fully develop and emerge. Characterizing the ability of this protein to protect hosts against specific parasites, the authors document an ongoing host-parasite evolutionary arms race. —LMZ
A horizontally transferred viral protein, parasitoid killing factor, protects insects from parasitic wasps.
Interkingdom competition occurs between hymenopteran parasitoids and insect viruses sharing the same insect hosts. It has been assumed that parasitoid larvae die with the death of the infected host or as result of competition for host resources. Here we describe a gene family,
parasitoid killing factor
(
pkf
), that encodes proteins toxic to parasitoids of the Microgastrinae group and determines parasitism success.
Pkfs
are found in several entomopathogenic DNA virus families and in some lepidopteran genomes. We provide evidence of equivalent and specific toxicity against endoparasites for PKFs found in entomopoxvirus, ascovirus, baculovirus, and Lepidoptera through a mechanism that elicits apoptosis in the cells of susceptible parasitoids. This highlights the evolutionary arms race between parasitoids, viruses, and their insect hosts. |
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ISSN: | 0036-8075 1095-9203 |
DOI: | 10.1126/science.abb6396 |