Schneider Daniela I, Riegler Markus, Arthofer Wolfgang, Merçot Hervé, Stauffer Christian, Miller Wolfgang J
Laboratories of Genome Dynamics, Department of Cell- and Developmental Biology, Medical University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria.
Hawkesbury Institute for the Environment, University of Western Sydney, Penrith, Australia.
PLoS One. 2013 Dec 20;8(12):e82402. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0082402. eCollection 2013.
The common endosymbiotic Wolbachia bacteria influence arthropod hosts in multiple ways. They are mostly recognized for their manipulations of host reproduction, yet, more recent studies demonstrate that Wolbachia also impact host behavior, metabolic pathways and immunity. Besides their biological and evolutionary roles, Wolbachia are new potential biological control agents for pest and vector management. Importantly, Wolbachia-based control strategies require controlled symbiont transfer between host species and predictable outcomes of novel Wolbachia-host associations. Theoretically, this artificial horizontal transfer could inflict genetic changes within transferred Wolbachia populations. This could be facilitated through de novo mutations in the novel recipient host or changes of haplotype frequencies of polymorphic Wolbachia populations when transferred from donor to recipient hosts. Here we show that Wolbachia resident in the European cherry fruit fly, Rhagoletis cerasi, exhibit ancestral and cryptic sequence polymorphism in three symbiont genes, which are exposed upon microinjection into the new hosts Drosophila simulans and Ceratitis capitata. Our analyses of Wolbachia in microinjected D. simulans over 150 generations after microinjection uncovered infections with multiple Wolbachia strains in trans-infected lines that had previously been typed as single infections. This confirms the persistence of low-titer Wolbachia strains in microinjection experiments that had previously escaped standard detection techniques. Our study demonstrates that infections by multiple Wolbachia strains can shift in prevalence after artificial host transfer driven by either stochastic or selective processes. Trans-infection of Wolbachia can claim fitness costs in new hosts and we speculate that these costs may have driven the shifts of Wolbachia strains that we saw in our model system.
常见的内共生沃尔巴克氏体细菌以多种方式影响节肢动物宿主。它们大多因其对宿主繁殖的操控而为人所知,然而,最近的研究表明,沃尔巴克氏体也会影响宿主行为、代谢途径和免疫力。除了其生物学和进化作用外,沃尔巴克氏体还是害虫和病媒管理的新型潜在生物防治剂。重要的是,基于沃尔巴克氏体的控制策略需要在宿主物种之间进行可控的共生体转移以及新型沃尔巴克氏体 - 宿主关联的可预测结果。从理论上讲,这种人工水平转移可能会在转移的沃尔巴克氏体种群中引发基因变化。这可能通过新受体宿主中的从头突变或多态性沃尔巴克氏体种群从供体宿主转移到受体宿主时单倍型频率的变化来促进。在这里,我们表明,欧洲樱桃实蝇(Rhagoletis cerasi)体内的沃尔巴克氏体在三个共生体基因中表现出祖先和隐秘的序列多态性,当显微注射到新宿主果蝇(Drosophila simulans)和地中海实蝇(Ceratitis capitata)中时这些多态性会显现出来。我们对显微注射后的果蝇在超过150代中的沃尔巴克氏体分析发现,在之前被鉴定为单一感染的转染系中存在多种沃尔巴克氏体菌株感染。这证实了在之前逃过标准检测技术的显微注射实验中低滴度沃尔巴克氏体菌株的持续性。我们的研究表明,在随机或选择性过程驱动的人工宿主转移后,多种沃尔巴克氏体菌株的感染流行率可能会发生变化。沃尔巴克氏体的转染可能会在新宿主中产生适应性成本,我们推测这些成本可能导致了我们在模型系统中看到的沃尔巴克氏体菌株的变化。