Diet profoundly influences the composition of an animal's microbiome, especially in holometabolous insects, offering a valuable model to explore the impact of diet on gut microbiome dynamics throughout metamorphosis. Here, we use monarch butterflies (Danaus plexippus), specialist herbivores that feed as larvae on many species of chemically well-defined milkweed plants (Asclepias sp.), to investigate the impacts of development and diet on the composition of the gut microbial community.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOrganisms have evolved internal biological clocks to regulate their activities based on external environmental cues, such as light, temperature, and food. Environmental disruption of these rhythms, such as caused by constant light or frequent light schedule changes, has been shown to impair development, reduce survival, and increase infection susceptibility and disease progression in numerous organisms. However, the precise role of the biological clock in host-parasite interactions is understudied and has focused on unnatural host-parasite combinations in lab-adapted inbred models.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMonarch butterflies are known for their spectacular annual migration in eastern North America, with millions of monarchs flying up to 4,500 km to overwintering sites in central Mexico. Monarchs also live west of the Rocky Mountains, where they travel shorter distances to overwinter along the Pacific Coast. It is often assumed that eastern and western monarchs form distinct evolutionary units, but genomic studies to support this notion are lacking.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe immune system is regulated by circadian clocks within the brain and immune cells. Environmental circadian disruption (ECD), consisting of a 6-h phase advance of the light:dark cycle once a week for 4 weeks, elevates the inflammatory response to lipopolysaccharide (LPS) both in vivo and in vitro. This indicates that circadian disruption adversely affects immune function; however, it remains unclear how the circadian system regulates this response under ECD conditions.
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