Biology, Epidemiology and Risk Analysis in Animal Health, (BioEpAR), INRA, UMR 1300, Nantes, France.
PLoS One. 2012;7(1):e30692. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0030692. Epub 2012 Jan 26.
The identification of micro-organisms carried by ticks is an important issue for human and animal health. In addition to their role as pathogen vectors, ticks are also the hosts for symbiotic bacteria whose impact on tick biology is poorly known. Among these, the bacterium Wolbachia pipientis has already been reported associated with Ixodes ricinus and other tick species. However, the origins of Wolbachia in ticks and their consequences on tick biology (known to be very diverse in invertebrates, ranging from nutritional symbionts in nematodes to reproductive manipulators in insects) are unknown. Here we report that the endoparasitoid wasp Ixodiphagus hookeri (Hymenoptera, Chalcidoidea, Encyrtidae)--strictly associated with ticks for their development--infested at almost 100% prevalence by a W. pipientis strain belonging to a Wolbachia supergroup that has already been reported as associated with other hymenopteran parasitoids. In a natural population of I. ricinus that suffers high parasitism rates due to I. hookeri, we used specific PCR primers for both hymenopteran and W. pipientis gene fragments to show that all unfed tick nymphs parasitized by I. hookeri also harbored Wolbachia, while unparasitized ticks were Wolbachia-free. We demonstrated experimentally that unfed nymphs obtained from larvae exposed to I. hookeri while gorging on their vertebrate host also harbor Wolbachia. We hypothesize that previous studies that have reported W. pipientis in ticks are due to the cryptic presence of the endoparasitoid wasp I. hookeri. This association has remained hidden until now because parasitoids within ticks cannot be detected until engorgement of the nymphs brings the wasp eggs out of diapause. Finally, we discuss the consequences of this finding for our understanding of the tick microbiome, and their possible role in horizontal gene transfer among pathogenic and symbiotic bacteria.
蜱携带的微生物的鉴定对于人类和动物的健康是一个重要的问题。除了作为病原体载体的作用外,蜱还是共生细菌的宿主,而这些共生细菌对蜱生物学的影响知之甚少。其中,细菌沃尔巴克氏体已经被报道与硬蜱和其他蜱种有关。然而,蜱中的沃尔巴克氏体的起源及其对蜱生物学的影响(在无脊椎动物中非常多样化,从线虫中的营养共生体到昆虫中的生殖操纵者)尚不清楚。在这里,我们报告了一种内寄生蜂伊氏钩腹姬蜂(膜翅目,小蜂总科,姬蜂科)——严格地与蜱类共生以发育——几乎 100%被一种沃尔巴克氏体菌株感染,这种菌株属于已经被报道与其他膜翅目寄生蜂有关的沃尔巴克氏体超级群。在一个由于伊氏钩腹姬蜂而遭受高寄生率的硬蜱自然种群中,我们使用了针对膜翅目和沃尔巴克氏体基因片段的特异性 PCR 引物,结果表明,所有被伊氏钩腹姬蜂寄生的未吸血若虫都携带沃尔巴克氏体,而未被寄生的蜱则没有沃尔巴克氏体。我们通过实验证明,从暴露于伊氏钩腹姬蜂的幼虫中获得的未吸血若虫也携带沃尔巴克氏体。我们假设,以前报道的蜱中的沃尔巴克氏体是由于内寄生蜂伊氏钩腹姬蜂的隐匿存在。这种共生关系直到现在才被发现,因为直到若虫吸血使蜂卵从休眠中出来时,才能检测到蜱中的寄生蜂。最后,我们讨论了这一发现对我们理解蜱微生物组的影响,以及它们在致病性和共生性细菌之间的水平基因转移中的可能作用。