Weinert Lucy A, Werren John H, Aebi Alexandre, Stone Graham N, Jiggins Francis M
Institute of Evolutionary Biology, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, EH9 3JT, UK.
BMC Biol. 2009 Feb 2;7:6. doi: 10.1186/1741-7007-7-6.
Rickettsia are intracellular symbionts of eukaryotes that are best known for infecting and causing serious diseases in humans and other mammals. All known vertebrate-associated Rickettsia are vectored by arthropods as part of their life-cycle, and many other Rickettsia are found exclusively in arthropods with no known secondary host. However, little is known about the biology of these latter strains. Here, we have identified 20 new strains of Rickettsia from arthropods, and constructed a multi-gene phylogeny of the entire genus which includes these new strains.
We show that Rickettsia are primarily arthropod-associated bacteria, and identify several novel groups within the genus. Rickettsia do not co-speciate with their hosts but host shifts most often occur between related arthropods. Rickettsia have evolved adaptations including transmission through vertebrates and killing males in some arthropod hosts. We uncovered one case of horizontal gene transfer among Rickettsia, where a strain is a chimera from two distantly related groups, but multi-gene analysis indicates that different parts of the genome tend to share the same phylogeny.
Approximately 150 million years ago, Rickettsia split into two main clades, one of which primarily infects arthropods, and the other infects a diverse range of protists, other eukaryotes and arthropods. There was then a rapid radiation about 50 million years ago, which coincided with the evolution of life history adaptations in a few branches of the phylogeny. Even though Rickettsia are thought to be primarily transmitted vertically, host associations are short lived with frequent switching to new host lineages. Recombination throughout the genus is generally uncommon, although there is evidence of horizontal gene transfer. A better understanding of the evolution of Rickettsia will help in the future to elucidate the mechanisms of pathogenicity, transmission and virulence.
立克次氏体是真核生物的细胞内共生体,以感染人类和其他哺乳动物并引发严重疾病而闻名。所有已知的与脊椎动物相关的立克次氏体在其生命周期的一部分中由节肢动物传播,并且许多其他立克次氏体仅在节肢动物中发现,没有已知的第二宿主。然而,对于后一类菌株的生物学特性知之甚少。在这里,我们从节肢动物中鉴定出20种新的立克次氏体菌株,并构建了包括这些新菌株在内的整个属的多基因系统发育树。
我们表明立克次氏体主要是与节肢动物相关的细菌,并在该属中鉴定出几个新的类群。立克次氏体与其宿主并非共同进化,但其宿主转移最常发生在相关节肢动物之间。立克次氏体已经进化出多种适应性特征,包括通过脊椎动物传播以及在某些节肢动物宿主中杀死雄性。我们发现了立克次氏体之间水平基因转移的一个案例,其中一个菌株是来自两个远缘相关类群的嵌合体,但多基因分析表明基因组的不同部分倾向于共享相同的系统发育。
大约1.5亿年前,立克次氏体分为两个主要分支,其中一个主要感染节肢动物,另一个感染多种原生生物、其他真核生物和节肢动物。然后在大约5000万年前发生了快速辐射,这与系统发育树几个分支中生活史适应性的进化相吻合。尽管立克次氏体被认为主要是垂直传播的,但其宿主关联是短暂的,经常会转向新的宿主谱系。整个属中的重组通常并不常见,尽管有水平基因转移的证据。更好地理解立克次氏体的进化将有助于未来阐明致病性、传播和毒力的机制。