Yohsuke Tagami
Shizuoka University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Yohsuke Tagami.
Proceedings - Royal Society of London. Biological sciences | 2004
Masato Hiroki; Yohsuke Tagami; Kazuki Miura; Yoshiomi Kato
Wolbachia are rickettsial intracellular symbionts of arthropods and nematodes. In arthropods, they act as selfish genetic elements and manipulate host reproduction, including sex–ratio distortion and cytoplasmic incompatibility (CI). Previous studies showed that infection of feminizing Wolbachia and CI Wolbachia sympatrically occurred in the butterfly Eurema hecabe. We demonstrate that feminization–infecting individuals can rescue sperm modified by CI–infecting males. Phylogenetic analysis revealed that feminized individuals are infected with two distinct Wolbachia strains: one is shared with CI–inducing matrilines, and the other is only found in feminized matrilines. Therefore, the simultaneous double manipulation, CI rescue and feminization, is caused by different Wolbachia strains in feminized individuals, not by a single Wolbachia with two functions. This is the first finding of double infection of Wolbachia with different reproductive manipulations.
Journal of Economic Entomology | 2004
Kazuki Miura; Yohsuke Tagami; Makoto Ohtaishi; Akeo Iwasaki
Abstract A molecular method is applied for differentiating the morphologically related leafminers Liriomyza trifolli and L. sativae on tomato cultivation. The method requires multiplex polymerase chain reaction (PCR) amplification of a region of mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase DNA using multiprimer sets. The method divides the mitochondrial fragment of L. trifolli into two fragments and L. sativae into three fragments. It is faster, less costly, and easier than random amplified polymorphic DNA-PCR, PCR-restriction fragment-length polymorphism, and DNA sequencing and more sensitive than the enzyme electrophoresis method, which are other ways to differentiate these two species. We applied the method to samples from populations of another place, sex, and stage and obtained the same results.
Microbial Ecology | 2012
Masaya Watanabe; Yohsuke Tagami; Kazuki Miura; Daisuke Kageyama; Richard Stouthamer
Vertical transmission is the primary route of the endosymbiont Wolbachia for its own spread among invertebrate hosts, but horizontal transmission between different hosts is believed to have occurred multiple times. However, it is not well known how Wolbachia commonly spread among closely related hosts. We focused on the closely related species of the minute pirate bugs belonging to the genus Orius, which are important biological control agents in agricultural crops because they are the most useful natural enemy of various tiny pests, such as thrips. Here, we examined five Orius species (Orius sauteri, Orius nagaii, Orius minutus, Orius strigicollis, and Orius tantillus) from eight geographic localities in Japan for Wolbachia infection. Two distinct strains, wOus1 and wOus2, were detected based on Wolbachia surface protein (wsp) gene sequencing. Furthermore, multilocus sequence typing revealed that each of the strains comprised two variants that differed in a single nucleotide. The overall distribution patterns of the two Wolbachia strains were found to differ among host species: prevalent double infection with wOus1 and wOus2 in O. strigicollis; fixation of single infection with wOus2 in O. nagaii; occurrence of single infection with wOus1 in O. sauteri; prevalence of single infection with wOus1 in O. minutus with an exception in a single population; and lack of Wolbachia infection in O. tantillus. Such differences in the distribution patterns of Wolbachia may reflect the evolutionary history of Wolbachia infection among Orius species and/or ecological and physiological differences among the Orius species that determine the invasiveness and maintenance of the two Wolbachia strains.
Population Ecology | 2009
Kazuki Miura; Takehiko Yamanaka; Yoshito Suzuki; Yohsuke Tagami; Andrew Paul Davies
Parthenogenesis-inducing (PI) Wolbachia bacteria are reproductive parasites that cause infected (W+) female haplodiploid parasitoids to produce daughters without fertilization by males. Theoretically, PI Wolbachia infection should spread to fixation within Trichogramma populations as males are no longer required to produce female offspring. Infections in some naturally occurring Trichogramma populations are, however, maintained at frequencies ranging from 4 to 26%. Here we describe discrete equation models to examine if the PI Wolbachia infection in Trichogramma populations can be maintained at relatively low frequencies by mating regularity. Model outcomes suggest the probability of W+ females mating could stabilize Wolbachia infection frequency at low levels in Trichogramma populations. The primary mechanism maintaining low-level PI Wolbachia infection in Trichogramma populations is reducing the survivorship from egg to adult in infected relative to uninfected females. The model successfully demonstrates that the relatively low PI Wolbachia infection frequency in host populations can be maintained by fertilization, or male rescue, of infected eggs, which avoids potentially hazardous gamete duplication that occurs during Wolbachia-induced parthenogenesis.
Entomological Science | 2015
Yusuke Tsushima; Kayo Nakamura; Yohsuke Tagami; Kazuki Miura
Maternally inherited bacteria that kill male but not female hosts during embryogenesis have been widely reported in invertebrates. Harmonia axyridis is one of the species infected by male‐killing Spiroplasma. The presence of male‐killers in host populations can lead to the occurrence of extremely female‐biased sex ratios. Furthermore, infected females may have fewer chances to mate if males can discriminate between infected and uninfected females and prefer the latter. Although there have been many investigations of male‐killer infection rates in H. axyridis, little is known about the influence of host mating on male‐killer infection dynamics. We investigated copulation rates and changes in infection frequency in a wild population of H. axyridis in western Japan. Almost all infected females collected each year laid fertilized eggs and had therefore mated. Mean infection rates of females collected each year were 13% in 2003, 15% in 2012 and 23% in 2013. Statistical analysis showed that neither the copulation rate nor the infection rate differed significantly among years. These results suggest that the infection rate of H. axyridis with male‐killing Spiroplasma is kept approximately constant and that there is no difference in the chance of mating with infected and uninfected females.
Biological Control | 2006
Yohsuke Tagami; Makoto Doi; Keitaro Sugiyama; Akio Tatara; Tsutomu Saito
Biological Control | 2006
Yohsuke Tagami; Makoto Doi; Keitaro Sugiyama; Akio Tatara; Tsutomu Saito
Applied Entomology and Zoology | 2008
Keitaro Sugiyama; Kazuo Matsuno; Makoto Doi; Akio Tatara; Mitsuhiro Kato; Yohsuke Tagami
Applied Entomology and Zoology | 2008
Tsutomu Saito; Makoto Doi; Haruki Katayama; Shuji Kaneko; Yohsuke Tagami; Keitaro Sugiyama
Japanese Journal of Applied Entomology and Zoology | 2008
Tsutomu Saito; Makoto Doi; Yohsuke Tagami; Keitaro Sugiyama