Spontaneous parthenogenesis in the parasitoid wasp Cotesia typhae: low frequency anomaly or evolving process?

Archive ouverte

Dulac, Claire, Capdevielle | Benoist, Romain | Paquet, Sarah | Calatayud, Paul-André | Obonyo, Julius | Kaiser, Laure | Mougel, Florence

Edité par CCSD ; Peer Community In -

International audience. Hymenopterans are haplodiploids and unlike most other Arthropods they do not possess sexual chromosomes. Sex determination typically happens via the ploidy of individuals: haploids become males and diploids become females. Arrhenotoky is believed to be the ancestral reproduction mode in Hymenopterans, with haploid males produced parthenogenetically, and diploid females produced sexually. However, a number of transitions towards thelytoky (diploid females produced parthenogenetically) have appeared in Hymenopterans, and in most cases populations or species are either totally arrhenotokous or totally thelytokous. Here we present the case of Cotesia typhae (Fernandez-Triana), a Braconidae that produces parthenogenetic females at a low frequency. The phenotyping of two laboratory strains and one natural population showed that this frequency is variable, and that this rare thelytokous phenomenon also happens in the wild. Moreover, mated females from one of the laboratory strains produce a few parthenogenetic daughters among a majority of sexual daughters. The analysis of daughters of heterozygous virgin females allowed us to show that a mechanism similar to automixis with central fusion is very likely at play in C. typhae. This mechanism allows some parts of the genome to remain heterozygous, especially at the chromosomes' centromeres, which can be advantageous depending on the sex determination system involved. Lastly, in most species, the origin of thelytoky is either bacterial or genetic, and an antibiotic treatment as well as PCR experiments did not demonstrate a bacterial cause in C. typhae. The unusual case of low parthenogenetic frequency described in this species constitutes another example of the fascinating diversity of sex determination systems in Arthropods.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Interaction between the parasitoid Cotesia typhae and its host Sesamia nonagrioides : insights into virulence and resistance traits. Interaction between the parasitoid Cotesia typhae and its host Sesamia nonagrioides : insights into virulence and resistance traits: PhD works, supervised by Florence Mougel-Imbert and Laure Kaiser-ArnauldIn collaboration with Claire Capdevielle-Dulac, Pascaline Venon and Florian Lasfont

Archive ouverte | Gornard, Samuel | CCSD

International audience. Cotesia typhae is a parasitoid Hymenoptera specialized on Sesamia nonagrioides, a lepidopteran stem borer. Both species originate from east Africa, but S. nonagrioides colonized the Mediterra...

Revealing insect resistance mechanisms in a host-parasitoid interaction

Archive ouverte | Gornard, Samuel | CCSD

International audience. Insects are subject to infectious organisms and defend themselves with an innate immune system, as they are generally thought to lack acquired immunity. The innate defense is divided between ...

Habitat opening fostered diversity: impact of dispersal and habitat‐shifts in the evolutionary history of a speciose afrotropical insect group

Archive ouverte | Hévin, Noémie, M.-C. | CCSD

The data that support the findings of this study are openly available in Figshare at https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.22263175 (Hévin et al. 2024). Accession numbers for all gene fragments are listed in the Supporting informati...

Chargement des enrichissements...