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Locusts increase carbohydrate consumption to protect against a fungal biopesticide

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Locusts increase carbohydrate consumption to protect against a fungal biopesticide. / Graham, Robert; Graham, Juliane; Pulpitel, Tamara et al.
In: Journal of Insect Physiology, Vol. 69, 10.2014, p. 27-34.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Graham R, Graham J, Pulpitel T, Ponton F, Simpson SJ, Wilson K. Locusts increase carbohydrate consumption to protect against a fungal biopesticide. Journal of Insect Physiology. 2014 Oct;69:27-34. Epub 2014 May 24. doi: 10.1016/j.jinsphys.2014.05.015

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Graham, Robert ; Graham, Juliane ; Pulpitel, Tamara et al. / Locusts increase carbohydrate consumption to protect against a fungal biopesticide. In: Journal of Insect Physiology. 2014 ; Vol. 69. pp. 27-34.

Bibtex

@article{b4edbfb6e32a4d40adeaffb020b0b596,
title = "Locusts increase carbohydrate consumption to protect against a fungal biopesticide",
abstract = "There is growing evidence to suggest that hosts can alter their dietary intake to recoup the specific resources involved in mounting effective resistance against parasites and pathogens. We examined macronutrient ingestion and disease-resistance in the Australian plague locust (Chortoicetes terminifera), challenged with a fungal pathogen (Metarhizium acridum) under dietary regimes varying in their relative amounts of protein and digestible carbohydrate. Dietary protein influenced constitutive immune function to a greater extent than did carbohydrate, indicating higher protein costs of mounting an immune defence than carbohydrate or overall energy costs. However, it appears that increased immune function, as a result of greater protein ingestion, was not sufficient to protect locusts from fungal disease. We found that locusts restricted to diets high in protein (P) and low in carbohydrate (C) were more likely to die of a fungal infection than those restricted to diets with a low P:C ratio. We hypothesise that the fungus is more efficient at exploiting protein in the insect{\textquoteright}s haemolymph than the host is at producing immune effectors, tipping the balance in favour of the pathogen on high-protein diets. When allowed free-choice, survivors of a fungus-challenge chose a less-protein-rich diet than those succumbing to infection and those not challenged with fungus locusts. These results are contrary to previous studies on caterpillars in the genus Spodoptera challenged with bacterial and baculoviral pathogens, indicating that nutrient ingestion and pathogen resistance may be a complex interaction specific to different host species and disease agents.",
keywords = "Australian plague locust, Chortoicetes terminifera, Metarhizium acridum, Immune-function, Diet-choice, Therapeutic-medication",
author = "Robert Graham and Juliane Graham and Tamara Pulpitel and Fleur Ponton and Simpson, {Stephen J.} and Ken Wilson",
year = "2014",
month = oct,
doi = "10.1016/j.jinsphys.2014.05.015",
language = "English",
volume = "69",
pages = "27--34",
journal = "Journal of Insect Physiology",
issn = "0022-1910",
publisher = "Elsevier Limited",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Locusts increase carbohydrate consumption to protect against a fungal biopesticide

AU - Graham, Robert

AU - Graham, Juliane

AU - Pulpitel, Tamara

AU - Ponton, Fleur

AU - Simpson, Stephen J.

AU - Wilson, Ken

PY - 2014/10

Y1 - 2014/10

N2 - There is growing evidence to suggest that hosts can alter their dietary intake to recoup the specific resources involved in mounting effective resistance against parasites and pathogens. We examined macronutrient ingestion and disease-resistance in the Australian plague locust (Chortoicetes terminifera), challenged with a fungal pathogen (Metarhizium acridum) under dietary regimes varying in their relative amounts of protein and digestible carbohydrate. Dietary protein influenced constitutive immune function to a greater extent than did carbohydrate, indicating higher protein costs of mounting an immune defence than carbohydrate or overall energy costs. However, it appears that increased immune function, as a result of greater protein ingestion, was not sufficient to protect locusts from fungal disease. We found that locusts restricted to diets high in protein (P) and low in carbohydrate (C) were more likely to die of a fungal infection than those restricted to diets with a low P:C ratio. We hypothesise that the fungus is more efficient at exploiting protein in the insect’s haemolymph than the host is at producing immune effectors, tipping the balance in favour of the pathogen on high-protein diets. When allowed free-choice, survivors of a fungus-challenge chose a less-protein-rich diet than those succumbing to infection and those not challenged with fungus locusts. These results are contrary to previous studies on caterpillars in the genus Spodoptera challenged with bacterial and baculoviral pathogens, indicating that nutrient ingestion and pathogen resistance may be a complex interaction specific to different host species and disease agents.

AB - There is growing evidence to suggest that hosts can alter their dietary intake to recoup the specific resources involved in mounting effective resistance against parasites and pathogens. We examined macronutrient ingestion and disease-resistance in the Australian plague locust (Chortoicetes terminifera), challenged with a fungal pathogen (Metarhizium acridum) under dietary regimes varying in their relative amounts of protein and digestible carbohydrate. Dietary protein influenced constitutive immune function to a greater extent than did carbohydrate, indicating higher protein costs of mounting an immune defence than carbohydrate or overall energy costs. However, it appears that increased immune function, as a result of greater protein ingestion, was not sufficient to protect locusts from fungal disease. We found that locusts restricted to diets high in protein (P) and low in carbohydrate (C) were more likely to die of a fungal infection than those restricted to diets with a low P:C ratio. We hypothesise that the fungus is more efficient at exploiting protein in the insect’s haemolymph than the host is at producing immune effectors, tipping the balance in favour of the pathogen on high-protein diets. When allowed free-choice, survivors of a fungus-challenge chose a less-protein-rich diet than those succumbing to infection and those not challenged with fungus locusts. These results are contrary to previous studies on caterpillars in the genus Spodoptera challenged with bacterial and baculoviral pathogens, indicating that nutrient ingestion and pathogen resistance may be a complex interaction specific to different host species and disease agents.

KW - Australian plague locust

KW - Chortoicetes terminifera

KW - Metarhizium acridum

KW - Immune-function

KW - Diet-choice

KW - Therapeutic-medication

U2 - 10.1016/j.jinsphys.2014.05.015

DO - 10.1016/j.jinsphys.2014.05.015

M3 - Journal article

VL - 69

SP - 27

EP - 34

JO - Journal of Insect Physiology

JF - Journal of Insect Physiology

SN - 0022-1910

ER -