posted on 2012-06-15, 00:00authored byJaime
H. Noguez, Elizabeth S. Conner, Yue Zhou, Todd A. Ciche, Justin R. Ragains, Rebecca A. Butcher
Entomopathogenic nematodes survive in the soil as stress-resistant
infective juveniles that seek out and infect insect hosts. Upon sensing
internal host cues, the infective juveniles regurgitate bacterial
pathogens from their gut that ultimately kill the host. Inside the
host, the nematode develops into a reproductive adult and multiplies
until unknown cues trigger the accumulation of infective juveniles.
Here, we show that the entomopathogenic nematode Heterorhabditis
bacteriophora uses a small-molecule pheromone to control
infective juvenile development. The pheromone is structurally related
to the dauer pheromone ascarosides that the free-living nematode Caenorhabditis elegans uses to control its development.
However, none of the C. elegans ascarosides are effective
in H. bacteriophora, suggesting that there is a high
degree of species specificity. Our report is the first to show that
ascarosides are important regulators of development in a parasitic
nematode species. An understanding of chemical signaling in parasitic
nematodes may enable the development of chemical tools to control
these species.