Johannesen Jes
Department of Evolutionary Ecology Zoological Institute University of Mainz Mainz Germany.
Ecol Evol. 2017 Jan 17;7(3):986-996. doi: 10.1002/ece3.2713. eCollection 2017 Feb.
The endosymbiotic bacterium is the most widespread bacteria in insects, yet the ecology of novel acquisitions in natural host populations is poorly understood. Using temporal data separated by 12 years, I tested the hypothesis that immigration of a parasitoid wasp led to transmission of its strain to its dipteran host, resulting in double-strain infection, and I used geographic and community surveys to explore the history of transmission in fly and parasitoid. Double infection in the fly host was present before immigration of the parasitoid. Equal prevalence of double infection in males and females, constant prevalence before and after immigration in two regions, and increase in one region of immigration indicate little if no competition between strains. Double infection was present throughout the fly's distribution range, but proportions varied highly (0-0.71, mean = 0.26). Two fly-specific MLST strains, observed in Eastern and Western Europe, respectively, differed at hcpA only. Flies with either fly-strain could be double infected with the parasitoid's strain. The geographic distribution of double infection implies that it is older than the fly host's extent distribution range and that different proportions of double infection are caused by demographic fluctuations in the fly. The geographic data in combination with community surveys of infections and strains further suggest that the parasitoid strain was the fly's ancestral strain that was transmitted to the parasitoid, that is, the reverse transmission route as first hypothesized. Based on these findings together with a comparison of oviposition strategies of other hosts harboring related strains, I hypothesize that trans-infection during an insect host's puparial metamorphosis might be important in promoting horizontal transmission among diverse holometabolic taxa.
内共生细菌是昆虫中分布最广泛的细菌,但对于自然宿主种群中新型感染的生态学却知之甚少。利用相隔12年的时间数据,我检验了一个假设,即寄生蜂的迁入导致其菌株传播到其双翅目宿主,从而导致双重菌株感染,并且我利用地理和群落调查来探究苍蝇和寄生蜂的传播历史。在寄生蜂迁入之前,苍蝇宿主中就已存在双重感染。雄性和雌性双重感染的患病率相等,两个地区在寄生蜂迁入前后患病率保持不变,而在一个迁入地区患病率有所增加,这表明菌株之间即便有竞争也很微弱。双重感染在苍蝇的整个分布范围内都存在,但比例差异很大(0 - 0.71,平均 = 0.26)。分别在东欧和西欧观察到的两种苍蝇特异性多位点序列分型(MLST)菌株,仅在hcpA基因上存在差异。携带任何一种苍蝇菌株的苍蝇都可能被寄生蜂的菌株双重感染。双重感染的地理分布意味着它比苍蝇宿主的分布范围更古老,不同比例的双重感染是由苍蝇的种群波动引起的。地理数据与感染和菌株的群落调查相结合,进一步表明寄生蜂的菌株是苍蝇的祖先菌株,该菌株后来传播到了寄生蜂身上,也就是说,与最初假设的传播途径相反。基于这些发现,再结合对携带相关菌株的其他宿主产卵策略的比较,我推测昆虫宿主蛹期变态期间的跨感染可能在促进不同全变态类群之间的水平传播中起重要作用。