International Leibniz Research School for Microbial and Biomolecular Interactions - ILRS Jena
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International Leibniz Research School

for Microbial and Biomolecular Interactions ILRS Jena

upcoming events
Prof. Dr. Ian T. Baldwin

Erika Kothe
Christian Hertweck
Gabriele Diekert
Johannes Wöstemeyer
Wilhelm Boland
Uwe Horn
Hanspeter Saluz
Eberhard Straube
Ian T. Baldwin
Peter Zipfel
Johannes Norgauer
Bernhard Hube
Georg Pohnert
Günther Theißen
Maria Mittag
Axel A. Brakhage
Reinhard Guthke
Uwe Horn/ Dirk Hoffmeister
Konrad Reinhart/ Ralf Claus
Gunter Wolf
Christine Skerka
Olaf Kniemeyer

B3 - Prof. Dr. Ian T. Baldwin
Microbial mediation of plant-herbivore interactions

Abstract:
The co-evolutionary interactions between plants and their insect herbivores were thought to be mediated by the plant and insect genomes, but upon deeper analysis it is now clear that both eucaryotic players are "Trogen horses" for microbial communities that may play decisive roles in the outcome of the interaction. The best documented example to date are the microbial endosymbionts that are housed in the mycetocyes of aphids and perform essential functions for the phloem-feeding lifestyle of aphids. Microbial communities in both the plants and herbivores can influence the signaling and the responses of plants to the attack from insects. This project will focus on the characterization of the microbial communities present in the guts of Manduca sexta larvae that feed on host plants which differ in their expression of various plant defense metabolites. In the Department of Molecular Ecology at the MPI-COE we have genetically transformed the host-plant of M. sexta, Nicotiana attenuata, to alter the accumulation of alkaloids, phenolics, defensive proteins and oxylipins. These plants will be used as food for Manduca sexta larvae and the larval gut microbial communities will be characterized to determine whether these plant defenses may in fact have evolved to target the microbial partners of insect herbivores, rather than the insects themselves.

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