PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Nicotinoid and fungal disease team up to break down termites' tough defenses

2015-05-20
(Press-News.org) WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. - Purdue University research shows that a small amount of nicotinoid pesticide substantially weakens termites' ability to fight off fungal diseases, a finding that could lead to more effective methods of pest control.

The study also provides clues into termites' robust defense systems and how nicotinoids affect social insects.

A team led by Michael Scharf, the O.W. Rollins/Orkin Chair and professor of entomology, found that a sublethal dose of imidacloprid knocked out key microbes in the termite gut and suppressed the social hygiene habits that help keep a termite colony healthy. Their defenses weakened, the termites became vulnerable to a fungal pathogen that normally poses little threat. The combination of pesticide and pathogen wiped out laboratory colonies in seven days.

"A termite colony can tolerate this dose of imidacloprid and fungal pathogen independently, but put them together, and they really have deleterious effects," Scharf said. "Understanding how to cripple termite defenses could lead us to new, safer control technologies."

Termites rarely get sick, despite living in moist, underground environments and in close contact with thousands of fellow colony members - conditions that are ideal for disease development.

While termites contain the disease defense genes common among all insects, they also have unique, non-genetic ways of protecting themselves from pathogenic bacteria and fungi, Scharf said.

Termites build up "social immunity" by grooming pathogens off of one another and transfer disease resistance throughout the colony by feeding on each other's secretions, said study co-author Drion Boucias, a professor of insect pathology at the University of Florida who has been researching termite immunity and response to disease for several decades.

"Social cleaning and grooming are critical," he said. "A solitary termite is susceptible to anything."

Termites also protect themselves by cultivating mutually beneficial relationships with microorganisms. The termite gut houses what Boucias called a "microbial garden" - a rich community of thousands of beneficial bacteria and protists, simple microorganisms whose symbiotic relationship coevolved with termites over millions of years. These microbes allow termites to digest cellulose, the tough material that gives plants their ability to stand upright. But they also appear to play an important role in disease defense.

Previous research suggests that some of these protists produce an enzyme that fatally punctures the cell wall of pathogenic invaders.

When Scharf and Boucias's team treated termite colonies with a small dose of imidacloprid, the protists began to die. The pesticide also had a druglike effect on termites, suppressing the grooming behaviors necessary to keep colony members from being infected with a fungal disease.

Applying a sublethal amount of a fungal pathogen quickly destroyed the imidacloprid-treated colonies. The pathogen penetrated the termites' outer cuticle and dissolved their muscles and organs.

"The termites became little fuzzy piles of mush," Scharf said. "We don't typically see this in colonies in the wild unless they are severely stressed."

The researchers studied the termites' gut metatranscriptome - all termite and microbe genes that are being expressed at a given moment - to measure the decline of the gut microbes and better understand which genes are involved in termite defense.

Unexpectedly, the pesticide and fungus did not trigger the "stereotypical" immunity genes that they do in other insect species such as bees, Scharf said. The finding could indicate that termites rely almost exclusively on their gut microbes and social immunity to protect their health.

Future control measures may target these defenses, opening the door for termites' natural enemies to finish the job, Boucias said.

INFORMATION:

The paper was published in PloS One and is available at http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0123391

Funding for the research was provided by the U.S. Department of Agriculture's National Institute for Food and Agriculture and the O.W. Rollins/Orkin Endowment at Purdue.



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Bat-inspired sonar system unveiled at Acoustical Society meeting

2015-05-20
Rolf Mueller, an associate professor of mechanical engineering in the College of Engineering at Virginia Tech, has developed a prototype of a dynamic sonar system inspired by horseshoe bats. The prototype was presented Wednesday (May 20) at the Acoustical Society of America meeting in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The principles used in its design could eventually lead to sonar systems much more effective than the best arrays available today. Because bats use a form of biological sonar called echolocation to navigate and hunt in the dark, they are natural models for man-made ...

Analysis compares stent expansion achieved with guidance from OCT versus IVUS

2015-05-20
Paris, France - May 20, 2015 - Data from the ILUMIEN II trial found that guidance from optimal coherence tomography (OCT) was associated with comparable stent expansion as guidance from intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) in patients undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). Results from the study were presented today at EuroPCR 2015, the official annual meeting of the European Association for Percutaneous Cardiovascular Interventions. Coronary stents must be optimally deployed with full lesion coverage and complete stent expansion to optimize outcomes. Less than ...

Online safety: If you want something done right, do it yourself

2015-05-20
When it comes to keeping online information safe from hackers and other criminals, it's up to the individual user to keep his or her data secure. Unfortunately, many Internet users don't take that responsibility seriously, thinking that's the job of the Internet provider or even the company that manufactured their computer. The end-user is often the "weakest link" in the Internet safety chain, said Saleem Alhabash, a Michigan State University faculty member who is part of a team that researches ways of making the Web safer for its users. The team's conclusion: Internet ...

Common mutation linked to heart disease

2015-05-20
A common mutation in a gene that regulates cholesterol levels may raise the risk of heart disease in carriers, according to a new UConn Health study. Researchers examined a mutation called the missense rs4238001 variant, which alters the type of protein made by the gene SCARB1, and thereby the body's cholesterol regulation. The study, led by Annabelle Rodriguez-Oquendo, an endocrinologist at UConn Health, was based on information about more than 5,000 people who participated in the Multi-Ethnic Study of Artherosclerosis in major American cities from 2000 to 2002. ...

Paleontologists discover the first dinosaur fossil in Washington State

Paleontologists discover the first dinosaur fossil in Washington State
2015-05-20
The fossils of the first dinosaur fossil from Washington State were collected along the shores of Sucia Island State Park in the San Juan Islands, and described in a study published May 20, 2015 in the open-access journal PLOS ONE by Brandon Peecook and Christian Sidor from the Burke Museum of Natural History and Culture at the University of Washington. The fossils were discovered while collecting ammonite fossils (a nautilus-like creature) from a marine rock unit known as the Cedar District Formation. The authors of the study describe the fossil as the partial left ...

Burke Museum paleontologists discover the first dinosaur fossil in Washington state

Burke Museum paleontologists discover the first dinosaur fossil in Washington state
2015-05-20
Burke Museum paleontologists have published a description of the first dinosaur fossil from Washington state. The fossil was collected by a Burke Museum research team along the shores of Sucia Island State Park in the San Juan Islands. Burke Museum researchers discovered the fossil while collecting ammonite fossils (a creature with a spiral shell) from a marine rock unit known as the Cedar District Formation. The researchers first noticed a small section of exposed bone on the surface of the rocks, then returned with a team of paleontologists to help excavate the fossil ...

Paracetamol in pregnancy may lower testosterone in unborn boys

2015-05-20
Prolonged paracetamol use by pregnant women may reduce testosterone production in unborn baby boys, research has found. Researchers say their findings could help to explain reported links between paracetamol use in pregnancy and reproductive health problems in young boys. Paracetamol is the primary medicine used for managing pain and fever during pregnancy. The authors recommend that expectant mothers should follow existing guidelines that the painkiller be taken at the lowest effective dose for the shortest possible time. Testosterone, produced in the testicles, ...

Public not being informed about dangers of medical overdiagnosis

2015-05-20
A national survey reveals that only one in ten Australians report being told about the risk of overdiagnosis by their doctors, according to research published today in the scientific journal PLOS ONE. The increasingly recognised problem of overdiagnosis happens when someone is diagnosed with a disease that will never cause them any harm, often as a result of healthy people being screened for diseases such as breast or prostate cancer. Overdiagnosis can be harmful due to unnecessary labelling and treatment. The telephone survey (mobile and landline) of 500 Australians ...

American College of Cardiology registry aims to improve cardiovascular care in India

2015-05-20
WASHINGTON (May 20, 2015) - Despite challenges, it is feasible to collect and study the quality of outpatient cardiovascular care in a resource-limited environment like India, according to a pilot study published today in the Journal of the American Heart Association. Researchers used the American College of Cardiology's PINNACLE India Quality Improvement Program registry to examine performance measures and outline areas for further improvement in cardiovascular care delivery. There is a growing burden of cardiovascular disease in India, but only limited data is available ...

Re-engineered antibiotic shows potential for treatment of drug-resistant bacteria

2015-05-20
(MEMPHIS, Tenn. - May 20, 2015) Researchers led by St. Jude Children's Research Hospital scientists have developed a second-generation antibiotic that shows early effectiveness against common bacterial infections that pose a serious health threat to children and adults. The findings appear today in the scientific journal Science Translational Medicine. The study marks the second time in recent years that St. Jude researchers have created promising antibiotics by changing the chemical structure of an old antibiotic named spectinomycin. Spectinomycin is a safe, but weak ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

UT San Antonio physicists' groundbreaking discoveries open new paths to combating diseases

Operando X-ray tomography reveals silicon–electrolyte interface dynamics in all-solid-state batteries

Building better, building beautiful

Okayama University chemists pioneer light-driven macrolactone synthesis

Understanding how plants distribute iron to young leaves

Next-generation neuro: Studying the infant brain in motion

Before the party starts: Parental attitudes linked to college binge drinking

Ultrasound pinpoints vascular complications from cosmetic fillers

Human gene maps are biased towards European ancestries

Atomically-tailored single atom platforms hold promise for next-generation catalysis

USC study reveals hidden cellular layers in the brain’s memory center

SPHERE’s debris disk gallery: tell-tale signs of dust and small bodies in distant solar systems

Terrestrial biodiversity grows with tree cover in agricultural landscapes

Experts call for AED placement on every commercial aircraft to boost in-flight cardiac arrest survival rates from 6% to up to 70%

“Proton‑iodine” regulation of protonated polyaniline catalyst for high‑performance electrolytic Zn‑I2 batteries

Directional three‑dimensional macroporous carbon foams decorated with WC1−x nanoparticles derived from salting‑out protein assemblies for highly effective electromagnetic absorption

Tropical Australian study sets new standard for Indigenous-led research

Invitation to co-edit a special issue on intelligent additive manufacturing

Success in measuring nano droplets, a new breakthrough in hydrogen, semiconductor, and battery research​

Shopping for two is stressful

Micro/nano‑reconfigurable robots for intelligent carbon management in confined‑space life‑support systems

Long-term antidepressant use surges in Australia, sparking warnings of overprescribing

To bop or to sway? The music will tell you

Neural network helps detect gunshots from illegal rainforest poaching

New evidence questions the benefit of calcium supplements in pregnancy for preventing pre-eclampsia

A molecular ‘reset button’ for reading the brain through a blood test

Why do some lung transplant patients face higher rejection risk?

New study offers a glimpse into 230,000 years of climate and landscape shifts in the Southwest

Gender-specific supportive environment key to cutting female athletes’ injury risks

Overreliance on AI risks eroding new and future doctors’ critical thinking while reinforcing existing bias

[Press-News.org] Nicotinoid and fungal disease team up to break down termites' tough defenses