Litcius/Paper detail

Variation in sex determination mechanisms may constrain parthenogenesis-induction by endosymbionts in haplodiploid systems

Eveline C. Verhulst, Bart A. Pannebakker, Elzemiek Geuverink

2023Current Opinion in Insect Science38 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Endosymbionts are maternally transmitted, and therefore benefit from maximizing female offspring numbers. Parthenogenesis-induction (PI) is the most effective type of manipulation for transmission, but has solely been detected in haplodiploid species, whereas cytoplasmic incompatibility (CI) is detected frequently across the arthropod phylum, including haplodiploids. This puzzling observation led us to hypothesize that the molecular sex-determination mechanism of the haplodiploid host may be a constraining factor in the ability of endosymbionts to induce parthenogenesis. Recent insights indicate that PI-endosymbionts may be able to directly manipulate sex-determination genes to induce the necessary steps required for PI in haplodiploids. However, sex-determination cascades vary extensively, so PI-induction would require a specialized and host-dependent tool set. Contrastingly, CI-related genes target conserved cell-cycle mechanisms, are located on mobile elements, and spread easily. Finally, endosymbiont-manipulations may have a strong impact on the effectiveness of haplodiploid biocontrol agents, but can also be used to enhance their efficacy.

Topics & Concepts

HaplodiploidyBiologyParthenogenesisHost (biology)Evolutionary biologyOffspringGeneticsMechanism (biology)GeneEmbryoPloidyEpistemologyPhilosophyPregnancyInsect symbiosis and bacterial influencesInsect-Plant Interactions and ControlInsect behavior and control techniques