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- Title
Enhancing mass production of Heterorhabditis bacteriophora: influence of different bacterial symbionts (Photorhabdus spp.) and inoculum age on dauer juvenile recovery.
- Authors
Wang, Zhen; Dhakal, Manoj; Vandenbossche, Bart; Dörfler, Verena; Barg, Mike; Strauch, Olaf; Ehlers, Ralf-Udo; Molina, Carlos
- Abstract
The entomopathogenic nematode Heterorhabditis bacteriophora (Nematoda: Rhabditidae) is used in biological insect control. Their dauer juveniles (DJs) are free-living and developmentally arrested, invading host insects. They carry cells of their bacterial symbiont Photorhabdus spp. in the intestine. Once inside the insect´s hemolymph the DJs perceive a food signal, triggering them to exit the DJ stage and regurgitate the Photorhabdus cells into the insect's haemocoel, which kill the host and later provide essential nutrients for nematode reproduction. The exit from the DJ stage is called "recovery". For commercial pest control, nematodes are industrially produced in monoxenic liquid cultures. Artificial media are incubated with Photorhabdus before DJs are added. In absence of the insect's food signal, DJs depend on unknown bacterial food signals to trigger exit of the DJ stage. A synchronized and high DJ recovery determines the success of the industrial in vitro production and can significantly vary between nematode strains, inbred lines and mutants. In this study, fourteen bacterial strains from H. bacteriophora were isolated and identified as P. laumondii, P. kayaii and P. thracensis. Although the influence of bacterial supernatants on the DJ recovery of three inbred lines and two mutants differed significantly, the bacterial impact on recovery has a subordinate role whereas nematode factors have a superior influence. Recovery of inbred lines decreased with age of the DJs. One mutant (M31) had very high recovery in bacterial supernatant and spontaneous recovery in Ringer solution. Another mutant (M88) was recovery defective.
- Subjects
INSECT nematodes; HETERORHABDITIS; MASS production; BIOLOGICAL control of insects; PHYSIOLOGIC salines; INSECT food
- Publication
World Journal of Microbiology & Biotechnology, 2024, Vol 40, Issue 1, p1
- ISSN
0959-3993
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1007/s11274-023-03803-0