Male-killer symbiont screening reveals novel associations in Adalia ladybirds.

Access Microbiology Pub Date : 2023-07-07 eCollection Date: 2023-01-01 DOI:10.1099/acmi.0.000585.v3
Jack Archer, Gregory D D Hurst, Emily A Hornett
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Abstract

While male-killing bacteria are known to infect across arthropods, ladybird beetles represent a hotspot for these symbioses. In some host species, there are multiple different symbionts that vary in presence and frequency between populations. To further our understanding of spatial and frequency variation, we tested for the presence of three male-killing bacteria: Wolbachia , Rickettsia and Spiroplasma , in two Adalia ladybird species from a previously unexplored UK population. The two-spot ladybird, A. bipunctata, is known to harbour all three male-killers, and we identified Spiroplasma infection in the Merseyside population for the first time. However, in contrast to previous studies on two-spot ladybirds from continental Europe, evidence from egg-hatch rates indicates the Spiroplasma strain present in the Merseyside population does not cause embryonic male-killing. In the related ten-spot ladybird, A. decempunctata, there is only one previous record of a male-killing symbiont, a Rickettsia , which we did not detect in the Merseyside sample. However, PCR assays indicated the presence of a Spiroplasma in a single A. decempunctata specimen. Marker sequence indicated that this Spiroplasma was divergent from that found in sympatric A. bipunctata. Genome sequencing of the Spiroplasma -infected A. decempunctata additionally revealed the presence of cobionts in the form of a Centistes parasitoid wasp and the parasitic fungi Beauveria. Further study of A. decempunctata from this population is needed to resolve whether it is the ladybird or wasp cobiont that harbours Spiroplasma , and to establish the phenotype of this strain. These data indicate first that microbial symbiont phenotype should not be assumed from past studies conducted in different locations, and second that cobiont presence may confound screening studies aimed to detect the frequency of a symbiont in field collected material from a focal host species.

Abstract Image

雄性杀手共生体筛选揭示了阿德利亚瓢虫的新型关联。
众所周知,杀雄细菌可感染各种节肢动物,而瓢虫则是这些共生体的热点。在某些宿主物种中,存在多种不同的共生体,它们在不同种群中的存在情况和频率各不相同。为了进一步了解空间和频率变化,我们检测了三种杀雄细菌的存在:沃尔巴克氏菌、立克次体和螺浆菌。已知双斑瓢虫(A. bipunctata)携带这三种杀雄细菌,我们首次在默西塞德郡的种群中发现了螺浆菌感染。然而,与之前对欧洲大陆两点瓢虫的研究不同,从卵孵化率得出的证据表明,默西塞德种群中的螺浆菌株不会导致胚胎杀雄。在相关的十点瓢虫(A. decempunctata)中,以前只有一个关于杀雄共生体(立克次体)的记录,我们在默西塞德郡的样本中没有检测到这种共生体。不过,PCR 检测表明,在一只蝶鸟标本中发现了螺旋体。标记序列表明,这种螺原体与同域双髻猿的螺原体不同。受螺原体感染的脱钩甲虫的基因组测序还发现了以百日咳寄生蜂和寄生真菌 Beauveria 形式存在的鞘翅目寄生虫。需要对该种群中的脱壳甲虫进行进一步研究,以确定是瓢虫还是黄蜂寄生虫携带螺旋体,并确定该菌株的表型。这些数据首先表明,不应根据过去在不同地点进行的研究来推测微生物共生体的表型;其次,共生体的存在可能会干扰旨在检测共生体在重点宿主物种实地采集材料中出现频率的筛选研究。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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