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Dive into the research topics where David G. Biron is active.

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Featured researches published by David G. Biron.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Exposure to sublethal doses of fipronil and thiacloprid highly increases mortality of honeybees previously infected by Nosema ceranae.

Cyril Vidau; Marie Diogon; Julie Aufauvre; Régis Fontbonne; Bernard Viguès; Jean-Luc Brunet; Catherine Texier; David G. Biron; Nicolas Blot; Hicham El Alaoui; Luc P. Belzunces; Frédéric Delbac

Background The honeybee, Apis mellifera, is undergoing a worldwide decline whose origin is still in debate. Studies performed for twenty years suggest that this decline may involve both infectious diseases and exposure to pesticides. Joint action of pathogens and chemicals are known to threaten several organisms but the combined effects of these stressors were poorly investigated in honeybees. Our study was designed to explore the effect of Nosema ceranae infection on honeybee sensitivity to sublethal doses of the insecticides fipronil and thiacloprid. Methodology/Finding Five days after their emergence, honeybees were divided in 6 experimental groups: (i) uninfected controls, (ii) infected with N. ceranae, (iii) uninfected and exposed to fipronil, (iv) uninfected and exposed to thiacloprid, (v) infected with N. ceranae and exposed 10 days post-infection (p.i.) to fipronil, and (vi) infected with N. ceranae and exposed 10 days p.i. to thiacloprid. Honeybee mortality and insecticide consumption were analyzed daily and the intestinal spore content was evaluated 20 days after infection. A significant increase in honeybee mortality was observed when N. ceranae-infected honeybees were exposed to sublethal doses of insecticides. Surprisingly, exposures to fipronil and thiacloprid had opposite effects on microsporidian spore production. Analysis of the honeybee detoxification system 10 days p.i. showed that N. ceranae infection induced an increase in glutathione-S-transferase activity in midgut and fat body but not in 7-ethoxycoumarin-O-deethylase activity. Conclusions/Significance After exposure to sublethal doses of fipronil or thiacloprid a higher mortality was observed in N. ceranae-infected honeybees than in uninfected ones. The synergistic effect of N. ceranae and insecticide on honeybee mortality, however, did not appear strongly linked to a decrease of the insect detoxification system. These data support the hypothesis that the combination of the increasing prevalence of N. ceranae with high pesticide content in beehives may contribute to colony depopulation.


Scientific Reports | 2012

Parasite-insecticide interactions: a case study of Nosema ceranae and fipronil synergy on honeybee

Julie Aufauvre; David G. Biron; Cyril Vidau; Régis Fontbonne; Mathieu Roudel; Marie Diogon; Bernard Viguès; Luc P. Belzunces; Frédéric Delbac; Nicolas Blot

In ecosystems, a variety of biological, chemical and physical stressors may act in combination to induce illness in populations of living organisms. While recent surveys reported that parasite-insecticide interactions can synergistically and negatively affect honeybee survival, the importance of sequence in exposure to stressors has hardly received any attention. In this work, Western honeybees (Apis mellifera) were sequentially or simultaneously infected by the microsporidian parasite Nosema ceranae and chronically exposed to a sublethal dose of the insecticide fipronil, respectively chosen as biological and chemical stressors. Interestingly, every combination tested led to a synergistic effect on honeybee survival, with the most significant impacts when stressors were applied at the emergence of honeybees. Our study presents significant outcomes on beekeeping management but also points out the potential risks incurred by any living organism frequently exposed to both pathogens and insecticides in their habitat.


Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences | 2005

Behavioural manipulation in a grasshopper harbouring hairworm: a proteomics approach.

David G. Biron; Laurent Marché; Fleur Ponton; Hugh D. Loxdale; Nathalie Galéotti; L. Renault; Cécile Joly; Frédéric Thomas

Abstract The parasitic Nematomorph hairworm, Spinochordodes tellinii (Camerano) develops inside the terrestrial grasshopper, Meconema thalassinum (De Geer) (Orthoptera: Tettigoniidae), changing the insects responses to water. The resulting aberrant behaviour makes infected insects more likely to jump into an aquatic environment where the adult parasite reproduces. We used proteomics tools (i.e. two-dimensional gel electrophoresis (2-DE), computer assisted comparative analysis of host and parasite protein spots and MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry) to identify these proteins and to explore the mechanisms underlying this subtle behavioural modification. We characterized simultaneously the host (brain) and the parasite proteomes at three stages of the manipulative process, i.e. before, during and after manipulation. For the host, there was a differential proteomic expression in relation to different effects such as the circadian cycle, the parasitic status, the manipulative period itself, and worm emergence. For the parasite, a differential proteomics expression allowed characterization of the parasitic and the free-living stages, the manipulative period and the emergence of the worm from the host. The findings suggest that the adult worm alters the normal functions of the grasshoppers central nervous system (CNS) by producing certain ‘effective’ molecules. In addition, in the brain of manipulated insects, there was found to be a differential expression of proteins specifically linked to neurotransmitter activities. The evidence obtained also suggested that the parasite produces molecules from the family Wnt acting directly on the development of the CNS. These proteins show important similarities with those known in other insects, suggesting a case of molecular mimicry. Finally, we found many proteins in the hosts CNS as well as in the parasite for which the function(s) are still unknown in the published literature (www) protein databases. These results support the hypothesis that host behavioural changes are mediated by a mix of direct and indirect chemical manipulation.


Journal of Apicultural Research | 2013

Standard methods for toxicology research in Apis mellifera

Piotr Medrzycki; Hervé Giffard; Pierrick Aupinel; Luc P. Belzunces; Marie-Pierre Chauzat; Christian Claßen; Marc Edouard Colin; Thierry Dupont; Vincenzo Girolami; Reed M. Johnson; Yves Le Conte; Johannes Lückmann; Matteo Marzaro; Jens Pistorius; Claudio Porrini; Andrea Schur; Fabio Sgolastra; Noa Simon Delso; Jozef van der Steen; Klaus Wallner; Cédric Alaux; David G. Biron; Nicolas Blot; Gherardo Bogo; Jean-Luc Brunet; Frédéric Delbac; Marie Diogon; Hicham El Alaoui; Bertille Provost; Simone Tosi

Summary Modern agriculture often involves the use of pesticides to protect crops. These substances are harmful to target organisms (pests and pathogens). Nevertheless, they can also damage non-target animals, such as pollinators and entomophagous arthropods. It is obvious that the undesirable side effects of pesticides on the environment should be reduced to a minimum. Western honey bees (Apis mellifera) are very important organisms from an agricultural perspective and are vulnerable to pesticide-induced impacts. They contribute actively to the pollination of cultivated crops and wild vegetation, making food production possible. Of course, since Apis mellifera occupies the same ecological niche as many other species of pollinators, the loss of honey bees caused by environmental pollutants suggests that other insects may experience a similar outcome. Because pesticides can harm honey bees and other pollinators, it is important to register pesticides that are as selective as possible. In this manuscript, we describe a selection of methods used for studying pesticide toxicity/selectiveness towards Apis mellifera. These methods may be used in risk assessment schemes and in scientific research aimed to explain acute and chronic effects of any target compound on Apis mellifera.


The Journal of Experimental Biology | 2006

Sensorimotor control during isothermal tracking in Caenorhabditis elegans

Linjiao Luo; Damon A. Clark; David G. Biron; L. Mahadevan; Aravinthan D. T. Samuel

SUMMARY In order to purposefully navigate their environments, animals rely on precise coordination between their sensory and motor systems. The integrated performance of circuits for sensorimotor control may be analyzed by quantifying an animals motile behavior in defined sensory environments. Here, we analyze the ability of the nematode C. elegans to crawl isothermally in spatial thermal gradients by quantifying the trajectories of individual worms responding to defined spatiotemporal thermal gradients. We show that sensorimotor control during isothermal tracking may be summarized as a strategy in which the worm changes the curvature of its propulsive undulations in response to temperature changes measured at its head. We show that a concise mathematical model for this strategy for sensorimotor control is consistent with the exquisite stability of the worms isothermal alignment in spatial thermal gradients as well as its more complex trajectories in spatiotemporal thermal gradients.


Insect Molecular Biology | 2006

'Suicide' of crickets harbouring hairworms: a proteomics investigation

David G. Biron; Fleur Ponton; Laurent Marché; Nathalie Galéotti; L. Renault; E. Demey-Thomas; J. Poncet; S. P. Brown; P. Jouin; Frédéric Thomas

Despite increasing evidence of host phenotypic manipulation by parasites, the underlying mechanisms causing infected hosts to act in ways that benefit the parasite remain enigmatic in most cases. Here, we used proteomics tools to identify the biochemical alterations that occur in the head of the cricket Nemobius sylvestris when it is driven to water by the hairworm Paragordius tricuspidatus. We characterized host and parasite proteomes during the expression of the water‐seeking behaviour. We found that the parasite produces molecules from the Wnt family that may act directly on the development of the central nervous system (CNS). In the head of manipulated cricket, we found differential expression of proteins specifically linked to neurogenesis, circadian rhythm and neurotransmitter activities. We also detected proteins for which the function(s) are still unknown. This proteomics study on the biochemical pathways altered by hairworms has also allowed us to tackle questions of physiological and molecular convergence in the mechanism(s) causing the alteration of orthoptera behaviour. The two hairworm species produce effective molecules acting directly on the CNS of their orthoptera hosts.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

Phylogenetic character mapping of proteomic diversity shows high correlation with subspecific phylogenetic diversity in Trypanosoma cruzi.

Jenny Telleria; David G. Biron; Jean-Paul Brizard; Edith Demettre; Martial Séveno; Christian Barnabé; Francisco J. Ayala; Michel Tibayrenc

We performed a phylogenetic character mapping on 26 stocks of Trypanosoma cruzi, the parasite responsible for Chagas disease, and 2 stocks of the sister taxon T. cruzi marinkellei to test for possible associations between T. cruzi–subspecific phylogenetic diversity and levels of protein expression, as examined by proteomic analysis and mass spectrometry. We observed a high level of correlation (P < 10−4) between genetic distance, as established by multilocus enzyme electrophoresis, and proteomic dissimilarities estimated by proteomic Euclidian distances. Several proteins were found to be specifically associated to T. cruzi phylogenetic subdivisions (discrete typing units). This study explores the previously uncharacterized links between infraspecific phylogenetic diversity and gene expression in a human pathogen. It opens the way to searching for new vaccine and drug targets and for identification of specific biomarkers at the subspecific level of pathogens.


Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences | 2006

Do distantly related parasites rely on the same proximate factors to alter the behaviour of their hosts

Fleur Ponton; Thierry Lefèvre; Camille Lebarbenchon; Frédéric Thomas; Hugh D. Loxdale; Laurent Marché; L. Renault; Marie-Jeanne Perrot-Minnot; David G. Biron

Phylogenetically unrelated parasites often increase the chances of their transmission by inducing similar phenotypic changes in their hosts. However, it is not known whether these convergent strategies rely on the same biochemical precursors. In this paper, we explored such aspects by studying two gammarid species (Gammarus insensibilis and Gammarus pulex; Crustacea: Amphipoda: Gammaridae) serving as intermediate hosts in the life cycle of two distantly related parasites: the trematode, Microphallus papillorobustus and the acanthocephalan, Polymorphus minutus. Both these parasite species are known to manipulate the behaviour of their amphipod hosts, bringing them towards the water surface, where they are preferentially eaten by aquatic birds (definitive hosts). By studying and comparing the brains of infected G. insensibilis and G. pulex with proteomics tools, we have elucidated some of the proximate causes involved in the parasite-induced alterations of host behaviour for each system. Protein identifications suggest that altered physiological compartments in hosts can be similar (e.g. immunoneural connexions) or different (e.g. vision process), and hence specific to the host–parasite association considered. Moreover, proteins required to alter the same physiological compartment can be specific or conversely common in both systems, illustrating in the latter case a molecular convergence in the proximate mechanisms of manipulation.


The Journal of Experimental Biology | 2013

Host–parasite molecular cross-talk during the manipulative process of a host by its parasite

David G. Biron; Hugh D. Loxdale

Summary Many parasite taxa are able to alter a wide range of phenotypic traits of their hosts in ways that seem to improve the parasite’s chance of completing its life cycle. Host behavioural alterations are classically seen as compelling illustrations of the ‘extended phenotype’ concept, which suggests that parasite genes have phenotype effects on the host. The molecular mechanisms and the host–parasite cross-talk involved during the manipulative process of a host by its parasite are still poorly understood. In this Review, the current knowledge on proximate mechanisms related to the ‘parasite manipulation hypothesis’ is presented. Parasite genome sequences do not themselves provide a full explanation of parasite biology nor of the molecular cross-talk involved in host–parasite associations. Recently, first-generation proteomics tools have been employed to unravel some aspects of the parasite manipulation process (i.e. proximate mechanisms and evolutionary convergence) using certain model arthropod-host–parasite associations. The pioneer proteomics results obtained on the manipulative process are here highlighted, along with the many gaps in our knowledge. Candidate genes and biochemical pathways potentially involved in the parasite manipulation are presented. Finally, taking into account the environmental factors, we suggest new avenues and approaches to further explore and understand the proximate mechanisms used by parasite species to alter phenotypic traits of their hosts.


Proteomics | 2010

Blood-feeding and immunogenic Aedes aegypti saliva proteins.

Ladawan Wasinpiyamongkol; Sirilaksana Patramool; Natthanej Luplertlop; Pornapat Surasombatpattana; Souleymane Doucoure; François Mouchet; Martial Seveno; Franck Remoue; Edith Demettre; Jean-Paul Brizard; Patrick Jouin; David G. Biron; Frédéric Thomas; Dorothée Missé

Mosquito‐transmitted pathogens pass through the insects midgut (MG) and salivary gland (SG). What occurs in these organs in response to a blood meal is poorly understood, but identifying the physiological differences between sugar‐fed and blood‐fed (BF) mosquitoes could shed light on factors important in pathogens transmission. We compared differential protein expression in the MGs and SGs of female Aedes aegypti mosquitoes after a sugar‐ or blood‐based diet. No difference was observed in the MG protein expression levels but certain SG proteins were highly expressed only in BF mosquitoes. In sugar‐fed mosquitoes, housekeeping proteins were highly expressed (especially those related to energy metabolism) and actin was up‐regulated. The immunofluorescence assay shows that there is no disruption of the SG cytoskeletal after the blood meal. We have generated for the first time the 2‐DE profiles of immunogenic Ae. aegypti SG BF‐related proteins. These new data could contribute to the understanding of the physiological processes that appear during the blood meal.

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Frédéric Thomas

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Thierry Lefèvre

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Laurent Marché

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Luc P. Belzunces

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Télesphore Sime-Ngando

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Jean-Luc Brunet

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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L. Renault

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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