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Dive into the research topics where Hanna M. Heidel-Fischer is active.

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Featured researches published by Hanna M. Heidel-Fischer.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

The butterfly plant arms-race escalated by gene and genome duplications

Patrick P. Edger; Hanna M. Heidel-Fischer; Michaël Bekaert; Jadranka Rota; Gernot Glöckner; Adrian E. Platts; David G. Heckel; Joshua P. Der; Eric Wafula; Michelle Tang; Johannes A. Hofberger; Ann Smithson; Jocelyn C. Hall; Matthieu Blanchette; Thomas E. Bureau; Stephen I. Wright; Claude W. dePamphilis; M. Eric Schranz; Michael S. Barker; Gavin C. Conant; Niklas Wahlberg; Heiko Vogel; J. Chris Pires; Christopher W. Wheat

Significance This research uncovers the mechanisms of an ancient arms race between butterflies and plants, seen today in countless gardens as caterpillars of cabbage butterflies that devour cabbage crop varieties. Nearly 90 million years ago, the ancestors of Brassica (mustards, cabbage) and related plants developed a chemical defense called glucosinolates. While very toxic to most insects, humans experience glucosinolates as the sharp taste in wasabi, horseradish and mustard. Here we report that this triggered a chemical arms race that escalated in complexity over time. By investigating the evolutionary histories of these plants and insects, we found that major increases in chemical defense complexity were followed by butterflies evolving countertactics to allow them to continue to attack and feed on the plants. Coevolutionary interactions are thought to have spurred the evolution of key innovations and driven the diversification of much of life on Earth. However, the genetic and evolutionary basis of the innovations that facilitate such interactions remains poorly understood. We examined the coevolutionary interactions between plants (Brassicales) and butterflies (Pieridae), and uncovered evidence for an escalating evolutionary arms-race. Although gradual changes in trait complexity appear to have been facilitated by allelic turnover, key innovations are associated with gene and genome duplications. Furthermore, we show that the origins of both chemical defenses and of molecular counter adaptations were associated with shifts in diversification rates during the arms-race. These findings provide an important connection between the origins of biodiversity, coevolution, and the role of gene and genome duplications as a substrate for novel traits.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

Immunity or digestion: glucanase activity in a glucan-binding protein family from lepidoptera

Yannick Pauchet; Dalial Freitak; Hanna M. Heidel-Fischer; David G. Heckel; Heiko Vogel

The cell surfaces of microorganisms display distinct molecular patterns formed from lipopolysaccharides, peptidoglycans, or β1,3-glucans. Binding of these surfaces by pattern recognition proteins such as β1,3-glucan recognition proteins (βGRPs) activates the immune response in arthropods. We identified a 40-kDa β1,3-glucan-binding protein with sequence similarity to previously characterized lepidopteran βGRPs from hemolymph, but unlike these it is secreted into the larval gut lumen and is an active β1,3-glucanase. This glucanase was not detected in hemolymph. Its mRNA is constitutively and predominantly expressed in the midgut and is induced there when larvae feed on a diet containing bacteria. Homologs of this predominantly midgut-expressed gene from many Lepidoptera possess key residues shown to be part of the active site of other glucanases, and form a cluster that is distinct from previously described βGRPs. In addition, this group includes proteins from insects such as the Anopheles gambiae GNBP subgroup B for which a catalytic role has not been previously suspected. The current domain classification does not distinguish between the catalytic and noncatalytic clades, and should be revised. The noncatalytic βGRPs may be evolutionarily derived from this newly described enzyme family that continues to function catalytically in digestion and/or pathogen defense.


Biological Invasions | 2010

Ecological fits, mis-fits and lotteries involving insect herbivores on the invasive plant, Bunias orientalis

Jeffrey A. Harvey; Arjen Biere; Taiadjana M. Fortuna; Louise E. M. Vet; Tim Engelkes; Elly Morriën; Rieta Gols; Koen J. F. Verhoeven; Heiko Vogel; Mirka Macel; Hanna M. Heidel-Fischer; Katharina Schramm; Van Der Putten

Exotic plants bring with them traits that evolved elsewhere into their new ranges. These traits may make them unattractive or even toxic to native herbivores, or vice versa. Here, interactions between two species of specialist (Pieris rapae and P. brassicae) and two species of generalist (Spodoptera exigua and Mamestra brassicae) insect herbivores were examined on two native crucifer species in the Netherlands, Brassica nigra and Sinapis arvensis, and an exotic, Bunias orientalis. Bu. orientalis originates in eastern Europe and western Asia but is now an invasive pest in many countries in central Europe. P. rapae, P. brassicae and S. exigua performed very poorly on Bu. orientalis, with close to 100% of larvae failing to pupate, whereas survival was much higher on the native plants. In choice experiments, the pierid butterflies preferred to oviposit on the native plants. Alternatively, M. brassicae developed very poorly on the native plants but thrived on Bu. orientalis. Further assays with a German Bu. orientalis population also showed that several specialist and generalist herbivores performed very poorly on this plant, with the exception of Spodoptera littoralis and M. brassicae. Bu. orientalis produced higher levels of secondary plant compounds (glucosinolates) than B. nigra but not S. arvensis but these do not appear to be important factors for herbivore development. Our results suggest that Bu. orientalis is a potential demographic ‘trap’ for some herbivores, such as pierid butterflies. However, through the effects of an evolutionary ‘lottery’, M. brassicae has found its way through the plant’s chemical ‘minefield’.


BMC Evolutionary Biology | 2010

Microevolutionary dynamics of a macroevolutionary key innovation in a Lepidopteran herbivore

Hanna M. Heidel-Fischer; Heiko Vogel; David G. Heckel; Christopher W. Wheat

BackgroundA molecular population genetics understanding is central to the study of ecological and evolutionary functional genomics. Population genetics identifies genetic variation and its distribution within and among populations, it reveals the demographic history of the populations studied, and can provide indirect insights into historical selection dynamics. Here we use this approach to examine the demographic and selective dynamics acting of a candidate gene involved in plant-insect interactions. Previous work documents the macroevolutionary and historical ecological importance of the nitrile-specifier protein (Nsp), which facilitated the host shift of Pieridae butterflies onto Brassicales host plants ~80 Myr ago.ResultsHere we assess the microevolutionary dynamics of the Nsp gene by studying the within and among-population variation at Nsp and reference genes in the butterfly Pieris rapae (Small Cabbage White). Nsp exhibits unexpectedly high amounts of amino acid polymorphism, unequally distributed across the gene. The vast majority of genetic variation exists within populations, with little to no genetic differentiation among four populations on two continents. A comparison of synonymous and nonsynonymous substitutions in 70 randomly chosen genes among P. rapae and its close relative Pieris brassicae (Large Cabbage White) finds Nsp to have a significantly relaxed functional constraint compared to housekeeping genes. We find strong evidence for a recent population expansion and no role for strong purifying or directional selection upon the Nsp gene.ConclusionsThe microevolutionary dynamics of the Nsp gene in P. rapae are dominated by recent population expansion and variation in functional constraint across the repeated domains of the Nsp gene. While the high amounts of amino acid diversity suggest there may be significant functional differences among allelic variants segregating within populations, indirect tests of selection could not conclusively identify a signature of historical selection. The importance of using this information for planning future studies of potential performance and fitness consequences of the observed variation is discussed.


Nature Communications | 2016

Immune modulation enables a specialist insect to benefit from antibacterial withanolides in its host plant

Andrea Barthel; Heiko Vogel; Yannick Pauchet; Gerhard Pauls; Grit Kunert; Astrid T. Groot; Wilhelm Boland; David G. Heckel; Hanna M. Heidel-Fischer

The development of novel plant chemical defenses and counter adaptations by herbivorous insect could continually drive speciation, producing more insect specialists than generalists. One approach to test this hypothesis is to compare closely related generalist and specialist species to reveal the associated costs and benefits of these different adaptive strategies. We use the specialized moth Heliothis subflexa, which feeds exclusively on plants in the genus Physalis, and its close generalist relative H. virescens. Specialization on Physalis plants necessitates the ability to tolerate withanolides, the secondary metabolites of Physalis species that are known to have feeding deterrent and immune inhibiting properties for other insects. Here we find that only H. subflexa benefits from the antibacterial properties of withanolides, and thereby gains a higher tolerance of the pathogen Bacillus thuringiensis. We argue that the specialization in H. subflexa has been guided to a large extent by a unique role of plant chemistry on ecological immunology.


Current opinion in insect science | 2015

Molecular mechanisms of insect adaptation to plant secondary compounds

Hanna M. Heidel-Fischer; Heiko Vogel


Insect Biochemistry and Molecular Biology | 2016

Potential detoxification of gossypol by UDP-glycosyltransferases in the two Heliothine moth species Helicoverpa armigera and Heliothis virescens

Corinna Krempl; Theresa Sporer; Michael Reichelt; Seung-Joon Ahn; Hanna M. Heidel-Fischer; Heiko Vogel; David G. Heckel; Nicole Joußen


Annual Plant Reviews volume 47: Insect-Plant Interactions | 2014

Plant transcriptomic responses to herbivory

Hanna M. Heidel-Fischer; Richard O. Musser; Heiko Vogel


Insect Biochemistry and Molecular Biology | 2017

Arabidopsis glucosinolates trigger a contrasting transcriptomic response in a generalist and a specialist herbivore

Fabian Schweizer; Hanna M. Heidel-Fischer; Heiko Vogel; Philippe Reymond


BMC Genomics | 2009

Phylogenetic relatedness and host plant growth form influence gene expression of the polyphagous comma butterfly (Polygonia c-album).

Hanna M. Heidel-Fischer; Dalial Freitak; Niklas Janz; Lina Söderlind; Heiko Vogel; Sören Nylin

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