Publications by authors named "Regina G Kleespies"

Article Synopsis
  • * A new bioassay system was developed to test the effectiveness of different bacteria against OPM larvae by applying bacterial solutions through oak bud dipping and targeting young larvae.
  • * While the commonly used Bacillus thuringiensis (Btk) was effective in killing OPM larvae, the tested strain Bacillus wiedmannii did not show any effectiveness, prompting further genetic analysis that revealed other potential pathogenic bacteria.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Rapid and reliable detection of pathogens is crucial to complement the growing industry of mass-reared insects, in order to safeguard the insect colonies from outbreak of diseases, which may cause significant economic loss. Current diagnostic methods are mainly based on conventional PCR and microscopic examination, requiring prior knowledge of disease symptoms and are limited to identifying known pathogens. Here, we present a rapid nanopore-based metagenomics approach for detecting entomopathogens from the European house cricket (Acheta domesticus).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Generating complete, high-quality genome assemblies is key for any downstream analysis, such as comparative genomics. For bacterial genome assembly, various algorithms and fully automated pipelines exist, which are free-of-charge and easily accessible. However, these assembly tools often cannot unambiguously resolve a bacterial genome, for example due to the presence of sequence repeat structures on the chromosome or on plasmids.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

subsp. (Btt) produces a coleopteran-specific crystal protoxin protein (Cry3Aa δ-endotoxin). After its discovery in 1982, the strain NB125 (DSM 5526) was eventually registered in 1990 to control the Colorado potato beetle ().

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The olive leaf moth (jasmine moth), Palpita vitrealis (Lepidoptera: Crambidae), is an important insect pest of olives in several Mediterranean countries. A new alphabaculovirus was isolated from diseased larvae of P. vitrealis in Egypt, first in Giza in spring 2005 and again in Marsa Matrouh in 2019.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Cydia pomonella granulovirus (CpGV) is a widely used biological control agent of the codling moth. Recently, however, the codling moth has developed different types of field resistance against CpGV isolates. Whereas type I resistance is Z chromosomal inherited and targeted at the viral gene of isolate CpGV-M, type II resistance is autosomal inherited and targeted against isolates CpGV-M and CpGV-S.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Microsporidian infections of insects are important natural constraints of population growth, often reducing lifespan, fecundity and fertility of the infected host. The recently discovered Tubulinosema suzukii infects Drosophila suzukii (spotted wing drosophila, SWD), an invasive pest of many fruit crops in North America and Europe. In laboratory tests, fitness effects on larval and adult stages were explored.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A microsporidium showing morphological characteristics typical of a Tubulinosema species was discovered in Drosophila suzukii. All developmental stages were diplokaryotic and grew in direct contact with the host cell cytoplasm. Spores from fresh preparations were ovoid to slightly pyriform and measured 4.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The term "virosphere" describes both the space where viruses are found and the space they influence, and can extend to their impact on the environment, highlighting the complexity of the interactions involved. Studying the biology of viruses and the etiology of virus disease is crucial to the prevention of viral disease, efficient and reliable virus diagnosis, and virus control. Electron microscopy (EM) is an essential tool in the detection and analysis of virus replication.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

An antagonistic effect of a microsporidium (Nosema sp.) infection on the virulence of Phthorimaea operculella granulovirus (PhopGV) was recorded in potato tuber moth (Phthorimaea operculella) larvae with mixed infections. When the P.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The discovery of insecticidal activity in root-colonizing pseudomonads, best-known for their plant-beneficial effects, raised fundamental questions about the ecological relevance of insects as alternative hosts for these bacteria. Since soil bacteria are limited in their inherent abilities of dispersal, insects as vectors might be welcome vehicles to overcome large distances. Here, we report on the transmission of the root-colonizing, plant-beneficial and insecticidal bacterium Pseudomonas protegens CHA0 from root to root by the cabbage root fly, Delia radicum.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The European isolate Agrotis segetum granulovirus DA (AgseGV-DA) is a slow killing, type I granulovirus due to low dose-mortality responses within seven days post infection and a tissue tropism of infection restricted solely to the fat body of infected Agrotis segetum host larvae. The genome of AgseGV-DA was completely sequenced and compared to the whole genome sequences of the Chinese isolates AgseGV-XJ and AgseGV-L1. All three isolates share highly conserved genomes.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Ips sexdentatus (six-spined engraver beetle) from Austria and Poland were dissected and examined for the presence of pathogens. Specimens collected in Austria were found to contain the ascomycetous fungus Metschnikowia cf. typographi.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The taxonomic genus Rickettsiella (Gammaproteobacteria; Legionellales) comprises intracellular bacteria associated with a wide range of arthropods including insects, arachnids and crustaceans. The present study provides ultrastructural together with genetic evidence for a Rickettsiella bacterium in the common rough woodlouse, Porcellio scaber (Isopoda, Porcellionidae), occurring in Germany, and shows that this bacterium is very closely related to one of the same genus occurring in California that infects the pill bug, Armadillidium vulgare (Isopoda, Armadillidiidae). Both bacterial isolates displayed the ultrastructural features described previously for crustacean-associated bacteria of the genus Rickettsiella, including the absence of well-defined associated protein crystals; occurrence of the latter is a typical characteristic of infection by this type of bacteria in insects, but has not been reported in crustaceans.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The box tree moth Cydalima perspectalis is an invasive insect pest in many European countries. Caterpillars of this species cause widespread damage on box tree plants. In this study, a new opportunity to control this pest with the baculovirus Anagrapha falcifera nucleopolyhedrovirus (AnfaNPV) was investigated.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

About 20,550 larvae, pupae and adults of the codling moth, Cydia pomonella L., were diagnosed for pathogens during long-term investigations (1955-2012) at the Institute for Biological Control in Darmstadt, Germany. The prevailing entomopathogens diagnosed in these studies were insect pathogenic fungi, especially Beauveria bassiana and Isaria farinosa, the microsporidium, Nosema carpocapsae, the Cydia pomonella granulovirus (CpGV), as well as mostly undetermined bacteria.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Wireworms, the polyphagous larvae of click beetles belonging to the genus Agriotes (Coleoptera: Elateridae) are severe and widespread agricultural pests that affect numerous crops globally. A new bacterial specimen identified in diseased wireworms had previously been shown by microscopy and 16S ribosomal RNA (rRNA) gene-based phylogenetic reconstruction to belong to the taxonomic genus Rickettsiella (Gammaproteobacteria) that comprises intracellular bacteria associated with and typically pathogenic for a wide range of arthropods. Going beyond these earlier results obtained from rRNA phylogenies, multilocus sequence analysis (MLSA) using a four marker scheme has been employed in the molecular taxonomic characterization of the new Rickettsiella pathotype, referred to as 'Rickettsiella agriotidis'.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Hard ticks (Acari: Ixodidae) are known to harbour intracellular bacteria from several phylogenetic groups that can develop both mutualistic and pathogenic relationships to the host. This is of particular importance for public health as tick derived bacteria can potentially be transmitted to mammals, including humans, where e.g.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The genus Rickettsiella comprises intracellular bacterial pathogens of a wide range of arthropods that are currently classified in four recognized species and numerous further pathotypes. However, both the delineation of and the synonymization of pathotypes with species are highly problematic. In the sequel of a previous phylogenomic study at the supra-generic level, nine selected genes - the 16S and 23S rRNA genes and the protein-encoding genes dnaG, ftsY, gidA, ksgA, rpoB, rpsA, and sucB - were evaluated for their potential as markers for the generic and infra-generic taxonomic classification of Rickettsiella-like bacteria.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Larvae of manuka beetles, Pyronota spp. (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae) cause pasture damage in New Zealand by feeding on the roots of grasses. Surveys for potential biocontrol agents revealed a putative disease, expressed as whitened larvae of one of the outbreak species, Pyronota setosa.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Wireworms, the polyphagous larvae of click beetles belonging to the genus Agriotes (Coleoptera: Elateridae), are severe and widespread agricultural pests affecting numerous crops. A previously unknown intracellular bacterium has been identified in a diseased Agriotes larva. Microscopic studies revealed the subcellular structures characteristic of Rickettsiella infections.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The genomic sequence analysis of many large dsDNA viruses is hampered by the lack of enough sample materials. Here, we report a whole genome amplification of the Oryctes rhinoceros nudivirus (OrNV) isolate Ma07 starting from as few as about 10 ng of purified viral DNA by application of phi29 DNA polymerase- and exonuclease-resistant random hexamer-based multiple displacement amplification (MDA) method. About 60 microg of high molecular weight DNA with fragment sizes of up to 25 kbp was amplified.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Adult female Phytoseiulus persimilis Athias-Henriot (Acari, Phytoseiidae) of a laboratory population show a set of characteristic symptoms, designated as non-responding (NR) syndrome. Mature predators shrink, cease oviposition and die. They show a lower degree of attraction to herbivore-induced plant volatiles and a greater tendency to leave prey patches carrying ample prey.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

'Rickettsiella melolonthae' is an intracellularly multiplying bacterial pathogen of European cockchafers, Melolontha melolontha (Linnaeus, 1758) and Melolontha hippocastani (Fabricius, 1801) (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae). We report the first determination of nucleotide sequences from this organism, i.e.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Rickettsiella tipulae is an intracellular bacterial pathogen of larvae of the crane fly, Tipula paludosa (Diptera: Tipulidae) and has previously been claimed to represent an independent species within the genus Rickettsiella. Recently, this taxon has been reorganized and transferred as a whole from the alpha-proteobacterial order Rickettsiales to the gamma-proteobacterial order Legionellales. Here we present the electron-microscopic identification of this rickettsial pathogen together with the first DNA sequence information for R.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF