| Literature DB >> 9170346 |
R U Ehlers1, A Wulff, A Peters.
Abstract
The pathogenicity of the nematode-bacterium complex Steinernema feltiae-Xenorhabdus bovienii to larvae of Tipula oleracea and Galleria mellonella was investigated by injection of dauer juvenile nematodes carrying their bacterial symbiont cells (monoxenic nematodes). Axenic nematodes (free of bacteria) and the symbiotic bacteria themselves were tested. The LC50 of X. bovienii in T. oleracea was 15,700 colony forming units (CFU)/larva compared to < or = 8 CFU in G. mellonella. Xenorhabdus bovienii is apparently removed from the tipulids hemolymph, possibly by cellular defense mechanisms. Axenic nematodes were less pathogenic than monoxenic nematodes for both insects. The difference was less pronounced in G. mellonella larvae: one axenic nematode was sufficient to kill 80% in 1 day. The remaining insects found dead after 50 days were developmentally arrested. In T. oleracea 20 axenic nematodes caused 39% whereas 20 monoxenic dauer juveniles caused 90% mortality within 8 days. The data indicate that the virulence of the S. feltiae/X. bovienii complex is greater than the additive effect of the nematodes and their bacteria, further evidence for the synergistic activity of the symbiotic bacto-helminthic complex during pathogenesis.Entities:
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Year: 1997 PMID: 9170346 DOI: 10.1006/jipa.1996.4647
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Invertebr Pathol ISSN: 0022-2011 Impact factor: 2.841