Committee on Genetics, Genomics and Systems Biology, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL 60637, USA.
Department of Biology, University of Nevada, Reno, NV 89557, USA.
G3 (Bethesda). 2022 Sep 30;12(10). doi: 10.1093/g3journal/jkac213.
Infections by maternally inherited bacterial endosymbionts, especially Wolbachia, are common in insects and other invertebrates but infection dynamics across species ranges are largely under studied. Specifically, we lack a broad understanding of the origin of Wolbachia infections in novel hosts, and the historical and geographical dynamics of infections that are critical for identifying the factors governing their spread. We used Genotype-by-Sequencing data from previous population genomics studies for range-wide surveys of Wolbachia presence and genetic diversity in North American butterflies of the genus Lycaeides. As few as one sequence read identified by assembly to a Wolbachia reference genome provided high accuracy in detecting infections in host butterflies as determined by confirmatory PCR tests, and maximum accuracy was achieved with a threshold of only 5 sequence reads per host individual. Using this threshold, we detected Wolbachia in all but 2 of the 107 sampling localities spanning the continent, with infection frequencies within populations ranging from 0% to 100% of individuals, but with most localities having high infection frequencies (mean = 91% infection rate). Three major lineages of Wolbachia were identified as separate strains that appear to represent 3 separate invasions of Lycaeides butterflies by Wolbachia. Overall, we found extensive evidence for acquisition of Wolbachia through interspecific transfer between host lineages. Strain wLycC was confined to a single butterfly taxon, hybrid lineages derived from it, and closely adjacent populations in other taxa. While the other 2 strains were detected throughout the rest of the continent, strain wLycB almost always co-occurred with wLycA. Our demographic modeling suggests wLycB is a recent invasion. Within strain wLycA, the 2 most frequent haplotypes are confined almost exclusively to separate butterfly taxa with haplotype A1 observed largely in Lycaeides melissa and haplotype A2 observed most often in Lycaeides idas localities, consistent with either cladogenic mode of infection acquisition from a common ancestor or by hybridization and accompanying mutation. More than 1 major Wolbachia strain was observed in 15 localities. These results demonstrate the utility of using resequencing data from hosts to quantify Wolbachia genetic variation and infection frequency and provide evidence of multiple colonizations of novel hosts through hybridization between butterfly lineages and complex dynamics between Wolbachia strains.
在昆虫和其他无脊椎动物中,母体遗传的细菌内共生体(尤其是沃尔巴克氏体)的感染很常见,但物种范围内的感染动态在很大程度上仍未得到研究。具体来说,我们缺乏对新宿主中沃尔巴克氏体感染的起源以及对识别其传播因素至关重要的感染的历史和地理动态的广泛了解。我们使用先前种群基因组学研究的基因型-测序数据,对北美的 Lycaeides 蝴蝶属进行了沃尔巴克氏体存在和遗传多样性的全范围调查。通过组装到沃尔巴克氏体参考基因组的一个序列读取就可以鉴定出很少的感染,这在宿主蝴蝶中的检测中提供了高度的准确性,正如确认 PCR 测试所确定的那样,并且仅以每个宿主个体 5 个序列读取的阈值就可以达到最大的准确性。使用此阈值,我们在跨越整个大陆的 107 个采样地点中除了 2 个地点外都检测到了沃尔巴克氏体,种群内的感染频率从 0%到 100%的个体不等,但大多数地点的感染频率都很高(平均感染率为 91%)。鉴定出了 3 种主要的沃尔巴克氏体谱系,它们似乎代表了沃尔巴克氏体对 Lycaeides 蝴蝶的 3 次独立入侵。总体而言,我们发现了大量证据表明,通过宿主谱系之间的种间转移获得了沃尔巴克氏体。菌株 wLycC 局限于一个蝴蝶分类群,由它衍生的杂交谱系以及其他分类群中相邻的种群。虽然其他 2 种菌株在整个大陆的其他地方都有检测到,但菌株 wLycB 几乎总是与 wLycA 共同存在。我们的人口统计模型表明,wLycB 是最近的一次入侵。在 wLycA 菌株中,最常见的 2 种单倍型几乎完全局限于单独的蝴蝶分类群,A1 单倍型主要在 Lycaeides melissa 中观察到,A2 单倍型最常在 Lycaeides idas 中观察到,这与从共同祖先获得的分类感染获取模式或通过杂交和伴随的突变相一致。在 15 个地点观察到超过 1 种主要的沃尔巴克氏体菌株。这些结果表明,使用宿主的重测序数据来量化沃尔巴克氏体的遗传变异和感染频率是有用的,并提供了通过蝴蝶谱系之间的杂交和沃尔巴克氏体菌株之间的复杂动态进行多个新宿主殖民化的证据。