Specificity of the parasite Escovopsis among two sympatric species of Cyphomyrmex fungus-growing ants 公开
Chiang, Stephanie SueLing (2010)
Abstract
Abstract
Specificity of the parasite Escovopsis among two sympatric
species of Cyphomyrmex
fungus-growing ants
By Stephanie Chiang
The fungus-growing ant system consists of four well-studied
symbionts: the ants,
their cultivated fungi, mutualistic antifungal-producing
actinomycete bacteria, and the
obligate parasite, Escovopsis. Escovopsis strains
have evolved to evade the defenses of
only a limited range of host cultivars, thus, Escovopsis
strains from one type of cultivar
often cannot infect a different type of cultivar. There is a broad
scale pattern of specificity
between different clades of Escovopsis and cultivar that
suggests specialization of the
parasite. In this study, we focus on the microbes associated with
two sympatric species of
fungus growing ants, Cyphomyrmex longiscapus and C.
muelleri, and their associated
Escovopsis strains; these species of ants are closely
related but have distantly related,
morphologically distinct cultivar types. Previous garden infections
have shown that
Escovopsis strains from C. muelleri and C.
longiscapus systems are able to occasionally
infect atypical cultivars within the Cyphomyrmex system. To
determine the potential for
host switching between C. longiscapus and C. muelleri
cultivars and their associated
Escovopsis strains, we performed in vitro bioassays to
examine the interactions between
the cultivars and their typical Escovopsis strains versus
their interactions with atypical
Escovopsis strains from the other colony. Both host
specialization and a potential for
host-switching were demonstrated both through these in vitro
bioassays and through
phylogenetic analyses of Escovopsis isolates. Extending on
previous phylogenetic
analyses of Cyphomyrmex
Escovopsis, additional
sampling here supports previous
findings of two main Escovopsis clades but suggests that one
clade is less host-specific
than previously assumed. Bioassays support that the two
phylogenetically distinct clades
of Cyphomyrmex-associated Escovopsis are generally
specialized to utilize different hosts
but that likelihood of a given Escovopsis strain being able
to establish infection of a given
host is dependent on genotype-genotype interactions between the
host-parasite pair.
Table of Contents
Table of Contents
1. Introduction- pg. 1
1.1 Figure 1- pg. 7
1.2 Figure 2- pg. 8
1.3 Figure 3- pg. 10
2. Methods- pg. 12
2.1 Figure 4- pg. 14
2.2 Figure 5- pg. 14
3. Results- pg. 18
3.1 Figure 6- pg. 19
3.2 Figure 7- pg. 21
3.3 Figure 8- pg. 22
3.4 Figure 9- pg. 23
3.5 Figure 10- pg. 24
3.6 Figure 11- pg. 25
3.7 Figure 12- pg. 26
3.8 Figure 13- pg. 27
3.9 Figure 14- pg. 28
4. Discussion- pg. 29
5. Appendices- p. 36
6. References- p. 40
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