Literature DB >> 21659459

Reciprocal interactions between the bark beetle-associated yeast Ogataea pini and host plant phytochemistry.

Thomas S Davis1, Richard W Hofstetter.   

Abstract

Here we report the first experiments testing reciprocal effects between the bark beetle-associated yeast, Ogataea pini, and phytochemicals present in tree tissues (Pinus ponderosa). We tested two hypotheses: (i) tree phytochemicals mediate O. pini growth and (ii) O. pini affects chemical composition of plant tissues. We tested six monoterpenes on O. pini biomass growth in vitro and found that most monoterpenes inhibited O. pini growth; however mean O. pini biomass increased 21.5% when treated with myrcene and 75.5% when treated with terpinolene, relative to control. Ogataea pini was grown on phloem tissue ex vivo to determine whether O. pini affected phloem chemistry. Monoterpene concentrations declined in phloem over time, but phloem colonized by O. pini had significantly different concentrations of monoterpenes at two periods than phloem with no yeast. After 7 d, when O. pini was present, concentrations of the monoterpene Δ-3-carene was 42.9% lower than uncolonized phloem and concentrations of the monoterpene terpinolene was 345.0% higher than uncolonized phloem. After 15 d phloem colonized by O. pini had 505.4% higher concentrations of α-pinene than uncolonized phloem. These experiments suggest that O. pini responds to phytochemicals present in host tissues and the presence of O. pini might alter the chemical environment of phloem tissues during the early stages of beetle development. The interactions between O. pini and phytochemicals in pine vascular tissues might have consequences for the bark beetle that vectors O. pini, Dendroctonus brevicomis.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21659459     DOI: 10.3852/11-083

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mycologia        ISSN: 0027-5514            Impact factor:   2.696


  9 in total

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Review 6.  The ecology of yeasts in the bark beetle holobiont: a century of research revisited.

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9.  Experimental infection of plants with an herbivore-associated bacterial endosymbiont influences herbivore host selection behavior.

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  9 in total

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