Braig H R, Guzman H, Tesh R B, O'Neill S L
Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut 06510.
Nature. 1994 Feb 3;367(6462):453-5. doi: 10.1038/367453a0.
Inherited rickettsial symbionts of the genus Wolbachia occur commonly in arthropods and have been implicated in the expression of parthenogenesis, feminization and cytoplasmic incompatibility Wolbachia from the Asian tiger mosquito, Aedes albopictus, to replace the natural infection of Drosophila simulans by means of embryonic microinjection techniques. The transferred Wolbachia infection behaves like a natural Drosophila infection with regard to its inheritance, cytoskeleton interactions and ability to induce incompatibility when crossed with uninfected flies. The transinfected flies are bidirectionally incompatible with all other naturally infected strains of Drosophila simulans, however, and as such represent a unique crossing type. The successful transfer of this symbiont between distantly related hosts suggests that it may be possible to introduce this agent experimentally into arthropod species of medical and agricultural importance in order to manipulate natural populations genetically.
沃尔巴克氏体属的遗传性立克次氏体共生菌常见于节肢动物中,并与孤雌生殖、雌性化和细胞质不亲和性的表现有关。通过胚胎显微注射技术,将来自亚洲虎蚊(白纹伊蚊)的沃尔巴克氏体替换果蝇的自然感染。就其遗传、细胞骨架相互作用以及与未感染果蝇杂交时诱导不亲和性的能力而言,转移的沃尔巴克氏体感染表现得如同果蝇的自然感染。然而,转染的果蝇与所有其他自然感染的拟果蝇菌株双向不亲和,因此代表了一种独特的杂交类型。这种共生菌在远缘宿主之间的成功转移表明,有可能通过实验将这种病原体引入具有医学和农业重要性的节肢动物物种,以便对自然种群进行基因操控。