Zombie Caterpillars!

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Bella Fortuna
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Zombie Caterpillars!

Post by Bella Fortuna » Sun Sep 11, 2011 2:26 pm

Interesting workings of a virus on the wee things:

http://www.latimes.com/news/science/la- ... 6073.story
Single gene seems to turn caterpillars into zombies
The insects infected with the virus dubbed LdMNPV go against nature and climb up trees, where they die and spread the infection downward, a study finds.

By Amina Khan, Los Angeles Times

September 9, 2011, 10:14 p.m.
Scientists have isolated a viral gene that induces zombie-like behavior — in caterpillars. The virus causes gypsy moth caterpillars to climb to the tops of trees, where they die and their disintegrating bodies rain infectious particles on their unsuspecting brethren below.

The discovery, published in Friday's edition of the journal Science, highlights a singular pathogen gene that manipulates the behavior of its host.

Researchers had long commented on the odd behavior of caterpillars infected by the virus, dubbed LdMNPV (short for Lymantria dispar nucleopolyhedrovirus). Typically, caterpillars travel down tree trunks in the daytime to avoid predators. But the sickened crawlers headed in the other direction, meeting their deaths in the tree canopy.

"You end up with this sack of virus that opens up," said lead author Kelli Hoover, an entomologist at Pennsylvania State University. "It melts and it's gooey and you get [a trillion] of them raining down and spreading down on the leaves. It's a very efficient virus."

Was this just coincidence, or was the virus able to control its host's behavior for maximum delivery?

To find out, Hoover and her colleagues homed in on a gene called egt that was suspected of being the culprit for the caterpillars' strange behavior. The gene produces a hormone that keeps the caterpillar from molting. When the caterpillar molts, it stays put for a while instead of traveling up the tree to eat, Hoover said.

The researchers infected caterpillars with three versions of the virus — one with the normal egt gene, one in which egt had been removed, and a third in which egt had been removed and reinserted.

Sure enough, caterpillars infected with egt-armed viruses climbed much higher before dying — allowing the pathogen to achieve maximum viral delivery. Caterpillars infected with the egt-free viruses died at low elevations, putting those viruses at a competitive disadvantage.

"It's surprising you could alter such a major behavior," said Glenn McConkey, a parasitologist at the University of Leeds in England, who wasn't involved in the study. "It opens up a question of whether this gene might have similar functions in other viruses."
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Re: Zombie Caterpillars!

Post by Gawdzilla Sama » Sun Sep 11, 2011 2:31 pm

You never know what you'll find in your genes. :coffee:
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Re: Zombie Caterpillars!

Post by tattuchu » Sun Sep 11, 2011 2:40 pm

Gawdzilla wrote:You never know what you'll find in your genes. :coffee:
And sometimes, apparently, it's pretty fucking gross. "It melts and it's gooey" "You end up with this sack of virus that opens up"
:? :? :?
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Re: Zombie Caterpillars!

Post by MiM » Sun Sep 11, 2011 2:45 pm

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Re: Zombie Caterpillars!

Post by Schneibster » Sun Sep 11, 2011 7:42 pm

tattuchu wrote:
Gawdzilla wrote:You never know what you'll find in your genes. :coffee:
And sometimes, apparently, it's pretty fucking gross. "It melts and it's gooey" "You end up with this sack of virus that opens up"
:? :? :?
That's what happens to all the cells in your body that get infected with virus. They get turned into zombie virus factories, and when they melt and the cell wall breaks, not only more virus but a bunch of chemical byproducts, some of which are pretty poisonous, get produced. That's why you feel bad, and why sometimes people die of it: the virus factory cell loss is accompanied by poisoning cell loss, often in a single population of cells, that is, a particular organ.

Colds do the same sorts of things to humans; we're turned into aerosol virus factories/spreaders, by having our cells produce virus and causing us to sneeze.

I thought you were maybe talking about a new species of wasp that does the same thing to caterpillars that this one does to ladybugs. I suspect we can all make some pretty accurate conjectures about what sort of mechanism in the ladybugs is being stimulated by the wasp venom and/or exudations of the grub.

ETA: Oh, and I missed a theme of the thread: of course, we can all see why virus that make you sneeze out-competes virus that doesn't. And why grub or venom that makes the ladybug stay and protect the grub out-competes grub or venom that does not. The interesting thing is that this doesn't kill the ladybug; in fact, it doesn't even stop it reproducing. So more vulnerable ladybugs get produced. This isn't predation; it's parasitism, and extremely effective parasitism at that.
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