Symbiotic Bacterium Modifies Aphid Body Color

Author:

Tsuchida Tsutomu1,Koga Ryuichi2,Horikawa Mitsuyo3,Tsunoda Tetsuto3,Maoka Takashi4,Matsumoto Shogo1,Simon Jean-Christophe5,Fukatsu Takema2

Affiliation:

1. Molecular Entomology Laboratory, RIKEN Advanced Science Institute, Wako 351-0198, Japan.

2. National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST), Tsukuba 305-8566, Japan.

3. Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Tokushima Bunri University, Tokushima 770-8514, Japan.

4. Research Institute for Production Development, Kyoto 606-0805, Japan.

5. Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique, UMR 1099 BiO3P, Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA)/Agrocampus Ouest/Université Rennes 1, BP 35327, 35653 Le Rheu Cedex, France.

Abstract

Turncoat Aphids Aphid color has consequences for the fate of the wearer: Coccinellid beetles prefer to eat red ones and parasitoid wasps attack green ones. What might happen if aphids could change color and outwit their predators? Tsuchida et al. (p. 1102 ) have found that a subpopulation of the pea aphid can do this, but not without help from a previously unknown species of bacterium that lives intimately with the aphid as an endosymbiont and makes red aphids turn green. The bacterium interferes with host pigment biosynthesis—itself borrowed from fungi long ago in evolution—to stimulate blue-green pigment production as the aphid larva matures, turning the red nymph into a green adult. The ecological consequences of this about-turn of color have yet to be tested, but other studies have shown a variety of effects on aphid behavior mediated by endosymbionts in response to adaptation to different food plants, temperature tolerance, and predator avoidance.

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference18 articles.

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2. J. Leonard A. Cordoba-Aquilar The Evolution of Primary Sexual Characters in Animals (Oxford Univ. Press Oxford 2010).

3. Biotypen und Unterarten der “Erbsenlaus” Acyrthosiphon pisum;Müller F. P.;Z. Pflanzenkr.,1962

4. A polymorphism maintained by opposite patterns of parasitism and predation

5. Aphidius ervi Preferentially Attacks the Green Morph of the Pea Aphid, Acyrthosiphon pisum

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