Three Wolbachia within an insect cell. They each have a white ring around them.
It ain't no halo.
Long before Count Dracula was stalking the night, knocking on the bedroom window and introducing young Victorians to the secret urges that emerge when you forget to take your hourly cold shower, there was Wolbachia.
Wolbachia is a genus of bacteria. They're as tiny and microscopic as you expect of any bacteria, but they have a certain... power. They don't infect wounds, they don't exactly cause disease and they don't kill willy-nilly. Well... not "nilly", anyway...
Wolbachia infects gonads.
I guess I should make it clear that we humans are quite safe from this devilish horror - Wolbachia has little interest in fleshy beings like us - their considerable attentions are devoted primarily to arthropods.
Arachnids, terrestrial isopods, even certain nematode worms are touched by this evil, but it's the insects that have it worst. At least 20% and perhaps as much as 70% of all insect species across the world are infected. Marine and freshwater crustaceans appear to be safe, so it seems water (holy or otherwise) is the only thing that can stop the shadow of Wolbachia from eclipsing the earth.
We need to inspect some gonads.
Wolbachia resides within the sexual organs of its host; the testes of the male, the ovaries of the female.
Image: Seth Bordenstein An insect's testes. Sperm DNA in red, Wolbachia in green |
Image: Seth Bordenstein Insect embryo. Chromosomes in blue, Wolbachia in bright green on the left end. |
The Gonad Lord has 4 ways of dealing with males.
The most brutally simplistic method is to kill them. As an infected male larva develops, Wolbachia slays it in its youth.
Image: adapted from Gustavo (lu7frb) via Flickr A feminized Hoverfly, yesterday. |
Best of all, if possible, is to induce parthenogenesis. This is where Wolbachia enables females to produce offspring without requiring males at all. In a sense, this is worse of all. The male of the species is completely wiped out and need never exist again. Scientists have treated individuals of these all-female species with antibiotics, destroying her Wolbachia infection such that she produces males for the first time in unknown eons.
These strategies for making males not exist any more are great if you're into that sort of thing, but it's difficult and rare. Instead, Wolbachia's most common approach is called cytoplasmic incompatibility.
Image: adapted from MuseumWales via Flickr Feminized fly ruins beautiful dress with brutally unshaven legs |
If the female is uninfected, or even if it's infected with a different strain of Wolbachia (a kind of rival clan), then the egg won't develop into a new adult. It's a kind of indirect way of controlling reproduction, doing whatever they can to ensure that every time new life is successfully brought into the world, Wolbachia already lurks within.
Image: adapted from chidorian via Flickr Shadow of Wolbachia |
This relationship isn't always one-sided, either. Wolbachia can confer certain advantages to their host, making them more resistant to viruses or insecticides. At least one nematode worm has become completely dependant on its infection, with Wolbachia providing it with chemicals necessary for survival that the worm no longer provides for itself. A dark bargain indeed.
Image: adapted from CharlesLam via Flickr I am within you And within the youness of you |
Of course, Wolbachia doesn't always have it its own way. Sometimes things don't go too well when it infects a brand new host species. Instead of quietly settling into its new domain, the Dweller of Gonads drives its prospective host insane. Specifically, the insect's immune system sets about destroying every cell that Wolbachia inhabits, which can lead to the destruction of the gonads or even the brain.
Image: Mark Taylor Cross section of disease-causing nematode worm. Wolbachia in red. |
Image: Seth Bordenstein Wolbachia cell packed full of viruses. |
It's as they say:
Great fleas have little fleas upon their backs to bite 'em,
And little fleas have lesser fleas, and so ad infinitum.
I just prefer them not to bite gonads...
2 comments:
Awesome! I had no idea there's such a thing that could infect and alter insects so much (it's even now more memorable and hilarious with all the fun gothic vibes in this article!). Man, I keep learning more unusual facts everytime I come here.
I was really amazed by this bacteria, too! I used to call them all "germs", and I'm still realising just how much more they do than get killed by toilet cleaners.
Glad you enjoyed it!
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