13 results on '"Calevro Federica"'
Search Results
2. Bacteriocyte plasticity in pea aphids facing amino acid stress or starvation during development.
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Lopes, Mélanie Ribeiro, Gaget, Karen, Renoz, François, Duport, Gabrielle, Balmand, Séverine, Charles, Hubert, Callaerts, Patrick, and Calevro, Federica
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PEA aphid ,AMINO acids ,INSECT physiology ,ESSENTIAL amino acids ,LIFE cycles (Biology) - Abstract
An important contributing factor to the evolutionary success of insects is nutritional association with microbial symbionts, which provide the host insects with nutrients lacking in their unbalanced diets. These symbionts are often compartmentalized in specialized cells of the host, the bacteriocytes. Even though bacteriocytes were first described more than a century ago, few studies have explored their dynamics throughout the insect life cycle and in response to environmental stressors. Here, we use the Buchnera aphidicola/ pea aphid symbiotic system to study how bacteriocytes are regulated in response to nutritional stress throughout aphid development. Using artificial diets, we analyzed the effects of depletion or excess of phenylalanine or leucine, two amino acids essential for aphid growth and whose biosynthetic pathways are shared between the host and the symbiont. Bacteriocytes responded dynamically to those treatments, while other tissues showed no obvious morphological change. Amino acid depletion resulted in an increase in bacteriocyte numbers, with the extent of the increase depending on the amino acid, while excess either caused a decrease (for leucine) or an increase (for phenylalanine). Only a limited impact on survival and fecundity was observed, suggesting that the adjustment in bacteriocyte (and symbiont) numbers is sufficient to withstand these nutritional challenges. We also studied the impact of more extreme conditions by exposing aphids to a 24 h starvation period at the beginning of nymphal development. This led to a dramatic drop in aphid survival and fecundity and a significant developmental delay. Again, bacteriocytes responded dynamically, with a considerable decrease in number and size, correlated with a decrease in the number of symbionts, which were prematurely degraded by the lysosomal system. This study shows how bacteriocyte dynamics is integrated in the physiology of insects and highlights the high plasticity of these cells. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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3. Aphid BCR4 Structure and Activity Uncover a New Defensin Peptide Superfamily.
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Loth, Karine, Parisot, Nicolas, Paquet, Françoise, Terrasson, Hugo, Sivignon, Catherine, Rahioui, Isabelle, Ribeiro Lopes, Mélanie, Gaget, Karen, Duport, Gabrielle, Delmas, Agnès F., Aucagne, Vincent, Heddi, Abdelaziz, Calevro, Federica, and da Silva, Pedro
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PEPTIDES ,DEFENSINS ,APHIDS ,PEA aphid ,PEST control ,CONOTOXINS ,PEAS ,COMPARATIVE genomics - Abstract
Aphids (Hemiptera: Aphidoidea) are among the most detrimental insects for agricultural plants, and their management is a great challenge in agronomical research. A new class of proteins, called Bacteriocyte-specific Cysteine-Rich (BCR) peptides, provides an alternative to chemical insecticides for pest control. BCRs were initially identified in the pea aphid Acyrthosiphon pisum. They are small disulfide bond-rich proteins expressed exclusively in aphid bacteriocytes, the insect cells that host intracellular symbiotic bacteria. Here, we show that one of the A. pisum BCRs, BCR4, displays prominent insecticidal activity against the pea aphid, impairing insect survival and nymphal growth, providing evidence for its potential use as a new biopesticide. Our comparative genomics and phylogenetic analyses indicate that BCRs are restricted to the aphid lineage. The 3D structure of BCR4 reveals that this peptide belongs to an as-yet-unknown structural class of peptides and defines a new superfamily of defensins. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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4. The Di-Symbiotic Systems in the Aphids Sipha maydis and Periphyllus lyropictus Provide a Contrasting Picture of Recent Co-Obligate Nutritional Endosymbiosis in Aphids.
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Renoz, François, Ambroise, Jérôme, Bearzatto, Bertrand, Fakhour, Samir, Parisot, Nicolas, Ribeiro Lopes, Mélanie, Gala, Jean-Luc, Calevro, Federica, and Hance, Thierry
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ENDOSYMBIOSIS ,ESSENTIAL amino acids ,SAP (Plant) ,PEA aphid ,APHIDS ,SERRATIA - Abstract
Dependence on multiple nutritional bacterial symbionts forming a metabolic unit has repeatedly evolved in many insect species that feed on nutritionally unbalanced diets such as plant sap. This is the case for aphids of the subfamilies Lachninae and Chaitophorinae, which have evolved di-symbiotic systems in which the ancient obligate nutritional symbiont Buchnera aphidicola is metabolically complemented by an additional nutritional symbiont acquired more recently. Deciphering how different symbionts integrate both metabolically and anatomically in such systems is crucial to understanding how complex nutritional symbiotic systems function and evolve. In this study, we sequenced and analyzed the genomes of the symbionts B. aphidicola and Serratia symbiotica associated with the Chaitophorinae aphids Sipha maydis and Periphyllus lyropictus. Our results show that, in these two species, B. aphidicola and S. symbiotica complement each other metabolically (and their hosts) for the biosynthesis of essential amino acids and vitamins, but with distinct metabolic reactions supported by each symbiont depending on the host species. Furthermore, the S. symbiotica symbiont associated with S. maydis appears to be strictly compartmentalized into the specialized host cells housing symbionts in aphids, the bacteriocytes, whereas the S. symbiotica symbiont associated with P. lyropictus exhibits a highly invasive phenotype, presumably because it is capable of expressing a larger set of virulence factors, including a complete flagellum for bacterial motility. Such contrasting levels of metabolic and anatomical integration for two S. symbiotica symbionts that were recently acquired as nutritional co-obligate partners reflect distinct coevolutionary processes specific to each association. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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5. Evolutionary novelty in the apoptotic pathway of aphids.
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Lopes, Mélanie Ribeiro, Parisot, Nicolas, Gaget, Karen, Huygens, Cissy, Peignier, Sergio, Duport, Gabrielle, Orlans, Julien, Charles, Hubert, Baatsen, Pieter, Jousselin, Emmanuelle, Da Silva, Pedro, Hens, Korneel, Callaerts, Patrick, and Calevro, Federica
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APHIDS ,PEA aphid ,INSECT pests ,APOPTOSIS ,DROSOPHILA melanogaster - Abstract
Apoptosis, a conserved form of programmed cell death, shows interspecies differences that may reflect evolutionary diversification and adaptation, a notion that remains largely untested. Among insects, the most speciose animal group, the apoptotic pathway has only been fully characterized in Drosophila melanogaster, and apoptosis-related proteins have been studied in a few other dipteran and lepidopteran species. Here, we studied the apoptotic pathway in the aphid Acyrthosiphon pisum, an insect pest belonging to the Hemiptera, an earlier-diverging and distantly related order. We combined phylogenetic analyses and conserved domain identification to annotate the apoptotic pathway in A. pisum and found low caspase diversity and a large expansion of its inhibitory part, with 28 inhibitors of apoptosis (IAPs). We analyzed the spatiotemporal expression of a selected set of pea aphid IAPs and showed that they are differentially expressed in different life stages and tissues, suggesting functional diversification. Five IAPs are specifically induced in bacteriocytes, the specialized cells housing symbiotic bacteria, during their cell death. We demonstrated the antiapoptotic role of these five IAPs using heterologous expression in a tractable in vivo model, the Drosophila melanogaster developing eye. Interestingly, IAPs with the strongest antiapoptotic potential contain two BIR and two RING domains, a domain association that has not been observed in any other species. We finally analyzed all available aphid genomes and found that they all show large IAP expansion, with new combinations of protein domains, suggestive of evolutionarily novel aphidspecific functions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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6. Bacteriocyte Reprogramming to Cope With Nutritional Stress in a Phloem Sap Feeding Hemipteran, the Pea Aphid Acyrthosiphon pisum.
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Colella, Stefano, Parisot, Nicolas, Simonet, Pierre, Gaget, Karen, Duport, Gabrielle, Baa-Puyoulet, Patrice, Rahbé, Yvan, Charles, Hubert, Febvay, Gérard, Callaerts, Patrick, and Calevro, Federica
- Abstract
Nutritional symbioses play a central role in the ability of insects to thrive on unbalanced diets and in ensuring their evolutionary success. A genomic model for nutritional symbiosis comprises the hemipteran Acyrthosiphon pisum , and the gamma-3-proteobacterium, Buchnera aphidicola , with genomes encoding highly integrated metabolic pathways. A. pisum feeds exclusively on plant phloem sap, a nutritionally unbalanced diet highly variable in composition, thus raising the question of how this symbiotic system responds to nutritional stress. We addressed this by combining transcriptomic, phenotypic and life history trait analyses to determine the organismal impact of deprivation of tyrosine and phenylalanine. These two aromatic amino acids are essential for aphid development, are synthesized in a metabolic pathway for which the aphid host and the endosymbiont are interdependent, and their concentration can be highly variable in plant phloem sap. We found that this nutritional challenge does not have major phenotypic effects on the pea aphid, except for a limited weight reduction and a 2-day delay in onset of nymph laying. Transcriptomic analyses through aphid development showed a prominent response in bacteriocytes (the core symbiotic tissue which houses the symbionts), but not in gut, thus highlighting the role of bacteriocytes as major modulators of this homeostasis. This response does not involve a direct regulation of tyrosine and phenylalanine biosynthetic pathway and transporter genes. Instead, we observed an extensive transcriptional reprogramming of the bacteriocyte with a rapid down-regulation of genes encoding sugar transporters and genes required for sugar metabolism. Consistently, we observed continued overexpression of the A. pisum homolog of RRAD, a small GTPase implicated in repressing aerobic glycolysis. In addition, we found increased transcription of genes involved in proliferation, cell size control and signaling. We experimentally confirmed the significance of these gene expression changes detecting an increase in bacteriocyte number and cell size in vivo under tyrosine and phenylalanine depletion. Our results support a central role of bacteriocytes in the aphid response to amino acid deprivation: their transcriptional and cellular responses fine-tune host physiology providing the host insect with an effective way to cope with the challenges posed by the variability in composition of phloem sap. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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7. Bacteriocyte cell death in the pea aphid/Buchnera symbiotic system.
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Simonet, Pierre, Gaget, Karen, Balmand, Séverine, Lopes, Mélanie Ribeiro, Parisot, Nicolas, Duport, Gabrielle, Febvay, Gérard, Heddi, Abdelaziz, Charles, Hubert, Calevro, Federica, Buhler, Kurt, Vulsteke, Veerle, and Callaerts, Patrick
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PEA aphid ,CELL death ,CYTOPLASM ,BACTERIA ,BACTERIAL physiology - Abstract
Symbiotic associations play a pivotal role in multicellular life by facilitating acquisition of new traits and expanding the ecological capabilities of organisms. In insects that are obligatorily dependent on intracellular bacterial symbionts, novel host cells (bacteriocytes) or organs (bacteriomes) have evolved for harboring beneficial microbial partners. The processes regulating the cellular life cycle of these endosymbiont-bearing cells, such as the cell-death mechanisms controlling their fate and elimination in response to host physiology, are fundamental questions in the biology of symbiosis. Here we report the discovery of a cell-death process involved in the degeneration of bacteriocytes in the hemipteran insect Acyrthosiphon pisum. This process is activated progressively throughout aphid adulthood and exhibits morphological features distinct from known cell-death pathways. By combining electron microscopy, immunohistochemistry, and molecular analyses, we demonstrated that the initial event of bacteriocyte cell death is the cytoplasmic accumulation of nonautophagic vacuoles, followed by a sequence of cellular stress responses including the formation of autophagosomes in intervacuolar spaces, activation of reactive oxygen species, and Buchnera endosymbiont degradation by the lysosomal system. We showed that this multistep cell-death process originates from the endoplasmic reticulum, an organelle exhibiting a unique reticular network organization spread throughout the entire cytoplasm and surrounding Buchnera aphidicola endosymbionts. Our findings provide insights into the cellular and molecular processes that coordinate eukaryotic host and endosymbiont homeostasis and death in a symbiotic system and shed light on previously unknown aspects of bacteriocyte biological functioning. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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8. Tyrosine pathway regulation is host-mediated in the pea aphid symbiosis during late embryonic and early larval development.
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Rabatel, Andréane, Febvay, Gérard, Gaget, Karen, Duport, Gabrielle, Baa-Puyoulet, Patrice, Sapountzis, Panagiotis, Bendridi, Nadia, Rey, Marjolaine, Rahbé, Yvan, Charles, Hubert, Calevro, Federica, and Colella, Stefano
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SYMBIOSIS ,PEA aphid ,VIVIPARITY ,GENE expression ,TYROSINE ,PHENYLALANINE ,DOPAMINE ,ASPARTATE aminotransferase - Abstract
Background: Nutritional symbioses play a central role in insects' adaptation to specialized diets and in their evolutionary success. The obligatory symbiosis between the pea aphid, Acyrthosiphon pisum, and the bacterium, Buchnera aphidicola, is no exception as it enables this important agricultural pest insect to develop on a diet exclusively based on plant phloem sap. The symbiotic bacteria provide the host with essential amino acids lacking in its diet but necessary for the rapid embryonic growth seen in the parthenogenetic viviparous reproduction of aphids. The aphid furnishes, in exchange, non-essential amino acids and other important metabolites. Understanding the regulations acting on this integrated metabolic system during the development of this insect is essential in elucidating aphid biology. Results: We used a microarray-based approach to analyse gene expression in the late embryonic and the early larval stages of the pea aphid, characterizing, for the first time, the transcriptional profiles in these developmental phases. Our analyses allowed us to identify key genes in the phenylalanine, tyrosine and dopamine pathways and we identified ACYPI004243, one of the four genes encoding for the aspartate transaminase (E.C. 2.6.1.1), as specifically regulated during development. Indeed, the tyrosine biosynthetic pathway is crucial for the symbiotic metabolism as it is shared between the two partners, all the precursors being produced by B. aphidicola. Our microarray data are supported by HPLC amino acid analyses demonstrating an accumulation of tyrosine at the same developmental stages, with an up-regulation of the tyrosine biosynthetic genes. Tyrosine is also essential for the synthesis of cuticular proteins and it is an important precursor for cuticle maturation: together with the up-regulation of tyrosine biosynthesis, we observed an up-regulation of cuticular genes expression. We were also able to identify some amino acid transporter genes which are essential for the switch over to the late embryonic stages in pea aphid development. Conclusions: Our data show that, in the development of A. pisum, a specific host gene set regulates the biosynthetic pathways of amino acids, demonstrating how the regulation of gene expression enables an insect to control the production of metabolites crucial for its own development and symbiotic metabolism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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9. A Genomic Reappraisal of Symbiotic Function in the Aphid/Buchnera Symbiosis: Reduced Transporter Sets and Variable Membrane Organisations.
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Charles, Hubert, Balmand, Séverine, Lamelas, Araceli, Cottret, Ludovic, Pérez-Brocal, Vicente, Burdin, Béatrice, Latorre, Amparo, Febvay, Gérard, Colella, Stefano, Calevro, Federica, and Rahbé, Yvan
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APHIDS ,SYMBIOGENESIS ,FUNGUS-bacterium relationships ,ACYRTHOSIPHON ,PEA aphid ,SCHIZAPHIS - Abstract
Buchnera aphidicola is an obligate symbiotic bacterium that sustains the physiology of aphids by complementing their exclusive phloem sap diet. In this study, we reappraised the transport function of different Buchnera strains, from the aphids Acyrthosiphon pisum, Schizaphis graminum, Baizongia pistaciae and Cinara cedri, using the re-annotation of their transmembrane proteins coupled with an exploration of their metabolic networks. Although metabolic analyses revealed high interdependencies between the host and the bacteria, we demonstrate here that transport in Buchnera is assured by low transporter diversity, when compared to free-living bacteria, being mostly based on a few general transporters, some of which probably have lost their substrate specificity. Moreover, in the four strains studied, an astonishing lack of innermembrane importers was observed. In Buchnera, the transport function has been shaped by the distinct selective constraints occurring in the Aphididae lineages. Buchnera from A. pisum and S. graminum have a three-membraned system and similar sets of transporters corresponding to most compound classes. Transmission electronic microscopic observations and confocal microscopic analysis of intracellular pH fields revealed that Buchnera does not show any of the typical structures and properties observed in integrated organelles. Buchnera from B. pistaciae seem to possess a unique double membrane system and has, accordingly, lost all of its outer-membrane integral proteins. Lastly, Buchnera from C. cedri revealed an extremely poor repertoire of transporters, with almost no ATP-driven active transport left, despite the clear persistence of the ancestral three-membraned system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2011
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10. Acyrthosiphon pisum.
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Calevro, Federica, Tagu, Denis, and Callaerts, Patrick
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PEA aphid , *INSECT pests , *ECOLOGY , *FUNCTIONAL genomics , *OVIPARITY - Published
- 2019
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11. Impact of Host Developmental Age on the Transcriptome of the Symbiotic Bacterium Buchnera aphidicola in the Pea Aphid (Acyrthosiphon pisum).
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Bermingham, John, Rabatel, Andréane, Calevro, Federica, Viñuelas, José, Febvay, Gérard, Charles, Hubert, Douglas, Angela, and Wilkinson, Tom
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PEA aphid , *ASIATIC witchweed , *GENES , *SYMBIOSIS , *VITAMIN B2 , *APHIDS , *APHIS , *INSECTS , *EMBRYOS - Abstract
Of the 617 genes from Buchnera aphidicola, the obligate bacterial symbiont of the pea aphid, 23% were differentially expressed in embryos compared to adults. Genes involved in flagellar apparatus and riboflavin synthesis exhibited particularly robust upregulation in embryos, suggesting functional differences between the symbiosis in the adult and embryo insect [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2009
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12. New insight into the RNA interference response against cathepsin-L gene in the pea aphid, Acyrthosiphon pisum: Molting or gut phenotypes specifically induced by injection or feeding treatments.
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Sapountzis, Panagiotis, Duport, Gabrielle, Balmand, Séverine, Gaget, Karen, Jaubert-Possamai, Stéphanie, Febvay, Gérard, Charles, Hubert, Rahbé, Yvan, Colella, Stefano, and Calevro, Federica
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RNA interference , *CATHEPSINS , *PEA aphid , *PHENOTYPES , *MICROINJECTIONS , *DOUBLE-stranded RNA , *GENE targeting , *GENE silencing , *INSECTS - Abstract
RNA interference (RNAi) has been widely and successfully used for gene inactivation in insects, including aphids, where dsRNA administration can be performed either by feeding or microinjection. However, several aspects related to the aphid response to RNAi, as well as the influence of the administration method on tissue response, or the mixed success to observe phenotypes specific to the gene targeted, are still unclear in this insect group. In the present study, we made the first direct comparison of two administration methods (injection or feeding) for delivery of dsRNA targeting the cathepsin-L gene in the pea aphid, Acyrthosiphon pisum. In order to maximize the possibility of discovering specific phenotypes, the effect of the treatment was analyzed in single individual aphids at the level of five body compartments: the bacteriocytes, the gut, the embryonic chains, the head and the remaining body carcass. Our analysis revealed that gene expression knockdown effect in each single body compartment was dependent on the administration method used, and allowed us to discover new functions for the cathepsin-L gene in aphids. Injection of cathepsin-L dsRNA was much more effective on carcass and head, inducing body morphology alterations, and suggesting a novel role of this gene in the molting of these insects. Administration by feeding provoked cathepsin-L knockdown in the gut and specific gut epithelial cell alteration, therefore allowing a better characterization of tissue specific role of this gene in aphids. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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13. Systemic analysis of the symbiotic function of Buchnera aphidicola, the primary endosymbiont of the pea aphid Acyrthosiphon pisum
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Brinza, Lilia, Viñuelas, José, Cottret, Ludovic, Calevro, Federica, Rahbé, Yvan, Febvay, Gérard, Duport, Gabrielle, Colella, Stefano, Rabatel, Andréane, Gautier, Christian, Fayard, Jean-Michel, Sagot, Marie-France, and Charles, Hubert
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ENDOSYMBIOSIS , *SYSTEMS biology , *PEA aphid , *GENETIC transcription , *PLANT metabolism , *GENOMES , *CROP diversification , *COMPARATIVE studies - Abstract
Abstract: Buchnera aphidicola is the primary obligate intracellular symbiont of most aphid species. B. aphidicola and aphids have been evolving in parallel since their association started, about 150 Myr ago. Both partners have lost their autonomy, and aphid diversification has been confined to smaller ecological niches by this co-evolution. B. aphidicola has undergone major genomic and biochemical changes as a result of adapting to intracellular life. Several genomes of B. aphidicola from different aphid species have been sequenced in the last decade, making it possible to carry out analyses and comparative studies using system-level in silico methods. This review attempts to provide a systemic description of the symbiotic function of aphid endosymbionts, particularly of B. aphidicola from the pea aphid Acyrthosiphon pisum, by analyzing their structural genomic properties, as well as their genetic and metabolic networks. To cite this article: L. Brinza et al., C. R. Biologies 332 (2009). [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
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