Roy Virginie, Girondot Marc, Harry Myriam
iEES-Institut d'écologie et des sciences de l'environnement de Paris, Département SOLéO, Université Paris-Est Créteil, Faculté des Sciences et Technologie, 61 avenue du Général de Gaulle, 94010 Créteil cedex, France.
Laboratoire d'Ecologie, Systématique et Evolution, Département d'Ecologie des Populations et des Communautés, Université Paris-Sud 11, Bâtiment 362, 91405 Orsay Cedex, France.
PLoS One. 2015 Feb 11;10(2):e0116070. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0116070. eCollection 2015.
Wolbachia are endosymbiotic bacteria of arthropods and nematodes that are able to manipulate host reproduction. Although vertically transmitted via the cytoplasm in eggs, horizontal transmission of Wolbachia among and within arthropod species has been shown to be common. Eusocial insects represent interesting models for studying Wolbachia transmission due to colonial organization and close interaction between nestmates. Here we conducted a detailed screening of Wolbachia infection for 15 colonies of the very common soil-feeding termites Cubitermes spp. affinis subarquatus (Termitidae, Termitinae) that consist of four distinct phylogenetic species in the Lopé forest Reserve, Gabon. Infection tests showed that 50% of the individuals were Wolbachia positive (N = 555) with 90% of reproductives and 48% of offspring infected. White soldiers, which are transitional stages preceding mature soldiers, had a significantly higher mean infection rate (74%) than the other castes and stages (63%, 33% and 39% for larvae, workers and mature soldiers, respectively). We used a maximum likelihood method and Akaike's Information Criterion in order to explain the non-expected high rate of Wolbachia infection in white soldiers. The best model included a species effect for the stochastic loss of Wolbachia and a caste effect for the rate of gain. After fitting, the best model selected was for a species-specific rate of loss with a null rate of new gain for larvae, workers and soldiers and a probability of 0.72 whatever the species, that a white soldier becomes newly contaminated during that stage. The mean expected infection rate in white soldiers without a new gain was estimated to 17% instead of the 74% observed. Here we discuss the possible explanations to the high infection rate observed in white soldiers.
沃尔巴克氏体是节肢动物和线虫的内共生细菌,能够操控宿主的繁殖。尽管它通过卵细胞质进行垂直传播,但研究表明,沃尔巴克氏体在节肢动物物种之间以及物种内部的水平传播也很常见。由于群居组织以及巢友之间的密切互动,群居昆虫成为研究沃尔巴克氏体传播的有趣模型。在此,我们对加蓬洛佩森林保护区15个非常常见的取食土壤的近缘方白蚁(白蚁科,大白蚁亚科)群体进行了沃尔巴克氏体感染的详细筛查,这些群体由四个不同的系统发育物种组成。感染测试表明,50%的个体沃尔巴克氏体呈阳性(N = 555),其中90%的繁殖蚁和48%的后代受到感染。白色兵蚁是成熟兵蚁之前的过渡阶段,其平均感染率(74%)显著高于其他品级和阶段(幼虫、工蚁和成熟兵蚁的感染率分别为63%、33%和39%)。我们使用最大似然法和赤池信息准则来解释白色兵蚁中沃尔巴克氏体感染率意外偏高的现象。最佳模型包括一个关于沃尔巴克氏体随机丢失的物种效应和一个关于获得率的品级效应。拟合后,所选的最佳模型是针对特定物种的丢失率,幼虫、工蚁和兵蚁的新获得率为零,无论物种如何,白色兵蚁在该阶段新被感染的概率为0.72。在没有新感染的情况下,白色兵蚁的平均预期感染率估计为17%,而非观察到的74%。在此,我们讨论了白色兵蚁中观察到的高感染率的可能解释。