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Plant green-island phenotype induced by leaf-miners is mediated by bacterial symbionts
Authors:Wilfried Kaiser  Elisabeth Huguet  Jér?me Casas  Céline Commin  David Giron
Institution:Institut de Recherche sur la Biologie de l''Insecte, UMR CNRS 6035, Université François Rabelais, 37200 Tours, France
Abstract:The life cycles of many organisms are constrained by the seasonality of resources. This is particularly true for leaf-mining herbivorous insects that use deciduous leaves to fuel growth and reproduction even beyond leaf fall. Our results suggest that an intimate association with bacterial endosymbionts might be their way of coping with nutritional constraints to ensure successful development in an otherwise senescent environment. We show that the phytophagous leaf-mining moth Phyllonorycter blancardella (Lepidoptera) relies on bacterial endosymbionts, most likely Wolbachia, to manipulate the physiology of its host plant resulting in the ‘green-island’ phenotype—photosynthetically active green patches in otherwise senescent leaves—and to increase its fitness. Curing leaf-miners of their symbiotic partner resulted in the absence of green-island formation on leaves, increased compensatory larval feeding and higher insect mortality. Our results suggest that bacteria impact green-island induction through manipulation of cytokinin levels. This is the first time, to our knowledge, that insect bacterial endosymbionts have been associated with plant physiology.
Keywords:plant–  insect interaction  leaf-miner  green-island  endosymbiont  Wolbachia  extended phenotype
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