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Wolbachia is a genus of gram-negative bacteria that can either infect many species of arthropod as an intracellular parasite, or act as a mutualistic... |
Male (section Further reading) determined by infection with parasitic, endosymbiotic bacteria of the genus Wolbachia. The bacterium can only be transmitted via infected ova, and the presence... |
Confused flour beetle (section Further reading) confused flour beetle displays mutualistic behaviors with the Wolbachia bacteria. The Wolbachia bacteria can display either mutualistic or parasitic behaviors... |
Aedes albopictus (section Further reading) disease, but without the Wolbachia infection. Wolbachia can also be used to transfer certain genes into the population to further control the spread of diseases... |
Phytoseiidae (section Wolbachia infections) Wolbachia species have been detected in many species of Phytoseiidae, both in the field and in the lab. Although most research focuses on Wolbachia in... |
as doxycycline to remove Wolbachia may prove to be beneficial as it does for the filariae that cause elephantiasis, but further studies are necessary. Microfilarial... |
Intragenomic conflict (section Further reading) maternal inheritance, similar to endosymbiont parasites in arthropods, like Wolbachia. Anisogamy generally produces zygotes that inherit cytoplasmic elements... |
Asobara (section Further reading) Asobara tabida is commensally infected with Wolbachia, and cannot reproduce in the absence of Wolbachia infection. As such, the genome of Asobara is... |
Gall wasp (section Further reading) possibly because of infection of the females' gametes by endosymbiotic Wolbachia bacteria. The various generations differentiate both in their appearance... |
Piwi-interacting RNA (section Further reading) Worldwide in Aedes aegypti Mosquitoes That Has Complex Interplays with Wolbachia and Dengue Virus Infection in Cells". J Virol. 92 (17). doi:10.1128/JVI... |
Mediterranean flour moth (section Wolbachia) oviposition typically occur at night. Mediterranean flour moths are infected by Wolbachia, a genus of bacteria that affects the reproduction of its host species... |
Mansonella perstans (section Further reading) coinfection of M. perstans with other filarial parasites, and the study of Wolbachia bacteria as endosymbionts in M. perstans and other filarial parasites... |
Glossina morsitans (section Further reading) with Wigglesworthia glossinidia and Wolbachia. Without Wigglesworthia, G. m. m. is sterile, and without Wolbachia they are reproductively incompatible... |
Filariasis (section Further reading) elephantiasis. Filarial parasites have symbiotic bacteria in the genus Wolbachia, which live inside the worm and seem to play a major role in both its... |
Carpenter ant (section Further reading) Camponotus species are also infected with Wolbachia, another endosymbiont that is widespread across insect groups. Wolbachia is associated with the nurse cells... |
Tick (section Further reading) A, Malard MA, Hermouet A, Capron G, Verheyden H (2012). "Detection of Wolbachia in the tick Ixodes ricinus is due to the presence of the hymenoptera endoparasitoid... |
Yellow fever (section Further reading) therapy. Infection was reduced in mosquitoes with the wMel strain of Wolbachia. Yellow fever has been researched by several countries as a potential... |
Parthenogenesis (section Further reading) seen in three species of Icerya scale insects. Parasitic bacteria like Wolbachia have been noted to induce automictic thelytoky in many insect species... |
Conogethes (section Further reading) 15.321. Li, Jing; Zhang, Ying; Wang, Zhen-Ying; He, Kang-Lai (2010). "Wolbachia infection in four geographic populations of yellow peach moth, Conogethes... |
Evolution (section Further reading) Naruo; Ijichi, Nobuyuki; et al. (29 October 2002). "Genome fragment of Wolbachia endosymbiont transferred to X chromosome of host insect". PNAS. 99 (22):... |