FLORIÁN, Vojtěch, Michal ŘEŘICHA, Michal KNAPP and Pavel DOBEŠ. The interspecific variability of ladybird immunity. In Zoologické dny 2020. 2020. ISBN 978-80-87189-32-0.
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Basic information
Original name The interspecific variability of ladybird immunity
Authors FLORIÁN, Vojtěch, Michal ŘEŘICHA, Michal KNAPP and Pavel DOBEŠ.
Edition Zoologické dny 2020, 2020.
Other information
Original language English
Type of outcome Conference abstract
Field of Study 10616 Entomology
Country of publisher Czech Republic
Confidentiality degree is not subject to a state or trade secret
Organization unit Faculty of Science
ISBN 978-80-87189-32-0
Keywords in English innate immunity; ladybird; antimicrobial activity; haemocyte concentration; total protein concentration; antimicrobial peptides; alkaloid
Tags International impact
Changed by Changed by: Mgr. Marie Šípková, DiS., učo 437722. Changed: 31/3/2021 17:02.
Abstract
The ladybird family (Coccinellidae) consists of more than 6,000 species living worldwide. Species differ in body size, colour, invasiveness and preferred food sources. Previous studies indicate the existence of interspecific difference in the effectivity of ladybird immune systems, however only very limited number of species has been compared. The aim of our study is to compare immune reactions of 24 ladybird species which occur especially in European region. The determined immune parameters, specifically the concentration of circulating haemocytes, antimicrobial activity against Gram-negative (Escherichia coli) and Gram-positive (Micrococcus luteus) bacteria, were compared with fundamental physiological parameter, the total concentration of proteins in haemolymph. Differences among ladybird species are discussed with respect to species life history, invasiveness and phylogeny. We observed that the haemolymph of species from genera Harmonia, Ceratomegilla and Hippodamia, which belong to one common clade, has very strong antimicrobial activity. The haemolymph of other species like seven-spot ladybird (Coccinella septempunctata) or orange ladybird (Halyzia sedecimguttata) showed intermediate level of activity; however, in many other species the antimicrobial activity against tested bacteria was not detectable. Species with a stronger immune system could have the advantage in colonization of new habitats and they are predicted to be invasive, however our results does not completely support this hypothesis. Interestingly, the three above-mentioned genera of ladybirds with strong immune activity had the lower concentration of proteins in haemolymph (50-80 mg/ml) than the most of other species in which the protein concentration ranged among 100-250 mg/ml. The results suggest that non-protein components present in haemolymph of Harmonia and related species act on a large scale in a fight against the pathogens.
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