Asian citrus psyllid stylet morphology and applicability to the model for inter-instar stylet replacement in the potato psyllid
Metadata
Show full item recordEditorial
Elsevier BV
Materia
Stylet replacement Molting Psyllids
Date
2018-08-14Referencia bibliográfica
Cicero, J. M., Alba-Tercedor, J., Hunter, W. B., Cano, L. M., Saha, S., Mueller, L. A., & Brown, S. J. (2018). Asian citrus psyllid stylet morphology and applicability to the model for inter-instar stylet replacement in the potato psyllid. Arthropod structure & development, 47(5), 542-551.
Sponsorship
Funding was provided by a grant from USDA-NIFA Award 2014- 70016-23028, 2015-2020, “Developing an Infrastructure and Product Test Pipeline to Deliver Novel Therapies for Citrus Greening Disease”.Abstract
In Hemiptera, presumptive stylets for each consecutive postembryonic instar are manufactured prior to
ecdysis to replace the ecdysial stylets discarded with the exuviae. With the discovery that the bacterium
“Candidatus” Liberibacter solanacearum accesses the tissues involved in the stylet replacement process of
the potato psyllid, a hypothesis was formed that the bacterium could adhere to the stylets of freshly
emerged instars and hence gain access to the host plant when feeding is resumed. Although unproven, it
was imperative that a model for stylet replacement be built. Stylet morphology and the stylet replacement
process of the Asian citrus psyllid (ACP), vector of “C.” L. asiaticus, causal pathogen of citrus
greening disease, are comparable to the potato psyllid model system. Morphology consists of a basal
terminus with its tab-shaped auricle, a base, shaft, and an apical terminus. Each of the four auricles act as
a platform for the replacement apparatus, which is compacted into a tight aggregate of cells, the ‘endcap’.
As modeled, on apolysis of larval instar hypodermis, the aggregate ‘deconstructs’ and expands into a
snail shell-shaped tube, the ‘atrium’, that houses the presumptive stylet as it is synthesized. Completed
stylets then despool from the atrium and are fitted into their functional positions as the next instar
emerges from its exuviae.