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Cytoplasmic incompatibility involving <Emphasis Type="Italic">Cardinium</Emphasis> and <Emphasis Type="Italic">Wolbachia</Emphasis> in the white-backed planthopper <Emphasis Type="Italic">Sogatella furcifera</Emphasis> (Hemiptera: Delphacidae)
Authors:Yuki Nakamura  Fumiko Yukuhiro  Masaya Matsumura  Hiroaki Noda
Institution:1.National Institute of Agrobiological Sciences,Tsukuba,Japan;2.National Agriculture and Food Research Organization,Kyushu Okinawa Agricultural Research Center,Koshi,Japan
Abstract:Cytoplasmic incompatibility (CI) is a reproductive phenotype induced by bacterial endosymbionts in arthropods. Measured as a reduction in egg hatchability resulting from the crossing of uninfected females with bacteria-infected males, CI increases the frequency of bacteria-infected hosts by restricting the fertilization opportunities of uninfected hosts in populations. Wolbachia, a type of alpha-proteobacteria, is well known as a CI inducer in a wide range of arthropod species, while Cardinium, a member of the phylum Bacteroidetes, is known to cause CI in one wasp and three spider mite species. In this study, dual infection with Cardinium and Wolbachia induced strong CI in a single host, Sogatella furcifera (Horváth), a planthopper species that is naturally infected with both bacteria. Specifically, infection with Cardinium alone was found to cause a 76 % reduction in egg development, and dual infection with Cardinium and Wolbachia a 96 % reduction, indicating that Cardinium induces CI and the dual infection raises the CI level. This study was the first to document reproductive alteration by Cardinium in a diploid host species.
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