Publication:
Conspecific and heterospecific pheromones stimulate dispersal of entomopathogenic nematodes during quiescence

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Date

2020-03-18

Authors

Erdoğan, Hilal

Authors

Kaplan, Fatma
Gentil, Abigail Perret
Giurintano, Julie
Stevens, Glen
Schiller, Karl C.
Mirti, Amaleah
Sampson, Edith
Torres, Cedric
Sun, Jiayi
Lewis, Edwin E.

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Nature Portfolio

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Abstract

Ascaroside pheromones stimulate dispersal, a key nematode behavior to find a new food source. Ascarosides produced by entomopathogenic nematodes (EPNs) drive infective juvenile (IJ) emergence from consumed cadavers and dispersal in soil. Without ascarosides from host cadavers, Steinernema feltiae (EPN) reduce dispersal substantially. To determine whether other Steinernema spp. exhibit the same behavior, we compared S. feltiae and S. carpocapsae IJs without host cadaver pheromones. Unlike S. feltiae, S. carpocapsae IJs continued to disperse. However, S. carpocapsae IJs exhibited a temperature-dependent quiescent period. The IJ quiescent period increased at ≤20 °C but did not appear at ≥25 °C. Consistent with this, S. carpocapsae IJ quiescence increased from 30 min to 24 h at ≤20 °C over 60 days. The quiescent period was overcome by dispersal pheromone extracts of their own, other Steinernema spp. and Heterorhabditis spp. Furthermore, S. carpocapsae IJ ambush foraging associated behaviors (tail standing, waving, and jumping) were unaffected by the absence or presence of host cadaver pheromones. For S. feltiae, IJ dispersal declined at all temperatures tested. Understanding the interaction between foraging strategies and pheromone signals will help uncover molecular mechanisms of host seeking, pathogenicity and practical applications to improve the EPN’s efficacy as biocontrol agents.

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Keywords

Caenorhabditis-elegans, Heterorhabditis-bacteriophora, Parasitic nematodes, Juvenile-hormone, Behavior, Hemolymph, Component, Movement, Science & technology - other topics

Citation

Kaplan, F. vd. (2020). "Conspecific and heterospecific pheromones stimulate dispersal of entomopathogenic nematodes during quiescence". Scientific Reports, 10(1).

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