FB2026_01 , released March 12, 2026
FB2026_01 , released March 12, 2026
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Reference
Citation
Schlenke, T.A., Morales, J., Govind, S., Clark, A.G. (2007). Contrasting infection strategies in generalist and specialist wasp parasitoids of Drosophila melanogaster.  PLoS Pathog. 3(10): e158.
FlyBase ID
FBrf0200558
Publication Type
Research paper
Abstract
Although host-parasitoid interactions are becoming well characterized at the organismal and cellular levels, much remains to be understood of the molecular bases for the host immune response and the parasitoids' ability to defeat this immune response. Leptopilina boulardi and L. heterotoma, two closely related, highly infectious natural parasitoids of Drosophila melanogaster, appear to use very different infection strategies at the cellular level. Here, we further characterize cellular level differences in the infection characteristics of these two wasp species using newly derived, virulent inbred strains, and then use whole genome microarrays to compare the transcriptional response of Drosophila to each. While flies attacked by the melanogaster group specialist L. boulardi (strain Lb17) up-regulate numerous genes encoding proteolytic enzymes, components of the Toll and JAK/STAT pathways, and the melanization cascade as part of a combined cellular and humoral innate immune response, flies attacked by the generalist L. heterotoma (strain Lh14) do not appear to initiate an immune transcriptional response at the time points post-infection we assayed, perhaps due to the rapid venom-mediated lysis of host hemocytes (blood cells). Thus, the specialist parasitoid appears to invoke a full-blown immune response in the host, but suppresses and/or evades downstream components of this response. Given that activation of the host immune response likely depletes the energetic resources of the host, the specialist's infection strategy seems relatively disadvantageous. However, we uncover the mechanism for one potentially important fitness tradeoff of the generalist's highly immune suppressive infection strategy.
PubMed ID
PubMed Central ID
PMC2042021 (PMC) (EuropePMC)
Related Publication(s)
Personal communication to FlyBase

Microarray Normalization Protocol for Schlenke et al.
Costello et al., 2008.9.10, Microarray Normalization Protocol for Schlenke et al. [FBrf0205608]

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Secondary IDs
    Language of Publication
    English
    Additional Languages of Abstract
    Parent Publication
    Publication Type
    Journal
    Abbreviation
    PLoS Pathog.
    Title
    PLoS Pathogens
    Publication Year
    2005-
    ISBN/ISSN
    1553-7366 1553-7374
    Data From Reference
    Genes (2)