Publication Date:
2013
Short description:
Evolving aphids: one genome-one organism insects or holobionts? / Mandrioli, Mauro; Manicardi, Gian Carlo. - In: INVERTEBRATE SURVIVAL JOURNAL. - ISSN 1824-307X. - ELETTRONICO. - 10:1(2013), pp. 1-6.
abstract:
Aphids have obligate mutualistic relationships with microorganisms that provide them with
essential substances lacking in their diet, together with symbionts conferring them conditional adaptive
advantages related, for instance, to the thermal tolerance and to the resistance to parasitoid wasps.
The presence/absence of a secondary symbiont may have a relevant phenotypic effect so that aphid
microbial symbionts constitute a sort of second genome with its own genetic inheritance. On the
whole, genes important for aphid survival and reproduction are not uniquely present in the aphid
nuclear and mitochondrial genomes, but also in the chromosomes of each symbiont. As a
consequence, aphids should be viewed as holobionts with an extended genome (the hologenome)
including the host and its symbiotic microbiome. In this connection, the true unit of selection in
evolution must be considered the aphid holobiont, in place of the single host as individual separated
from its symbionts
Iris type:
Articolo su rivista
Keywords:
aphids, bacterial symbiont, symbiosis, hologenome, holobiont
List of contributors:
Mandrioli, Mauro; Manicardi, Gian Carlo
Published in: