Cell-based assays and comparative genomics revealed the conserved and hidden effects of Wolbachia on insect sex determination.

IF 2.2 Q2 MULTIDISCIPLINARY SCIENCES
PNAS nexus Pub Date : 2024-08-22 eCollection Date: 2024-09-01 DOI:10.1093/pnasnexus/pgae348
Hiroshi Arai, Benjamin Herran, Takafumi N Sugimoto, Mai Miyata, Tetsuhiko Sasaki, Daisuke Kageyama
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Abstract

It is advantageous for maternally transmitted endosymbionts to skew the sex ratio of their hosts toward females. Some endosymbiotic bacteria, such as Wolbachia, cause their insect hosts to exclusively produce female offspring through male killing (MK) or feminization. In some lepidopteran insects, MK is achieved by affecting the sex-determining process in males, and a unique mechanism of MK and its functional link with feminization have been implicated. However, comparative analysis of these phenotypes is often difficult because they have been analyzed in different host-symbiont systems, and transinfection of Wolbachia across different hosts is often challenging. In this study, we demonstrated the effects of nine Wolbachia strains on the splicing of sex-determining genes in Lepidoptera by fixing the host genetic background using a cell culture system. Cell transinfection assays confirmed that three MK-inducing Wolbachia strains and one feminization-inducing Wolbachia strain increased the female-type splicing products of the core sex-determining genes doublesex, masculinizer, and zinc finger protein 2. Regarding Wolbachia strains that do not induce MK/feminization, three had no effect on these sex-determining genes, whereas two strains induced female-type splicing of masculinizer and doublesex but not zinc finger protein 2. Comparative genomics confirmed that homologs of oscar, the Wolbachia gene responsible for MK in Ostrinia, were encoded by four MK/feminizing Wolbachia strains, but not by five non-MK/nonfeminizing strains. These results support the conserved effects underlying MK and feminization induced by oscar-bearing Wolbachia and suggested other potential mechanisms that Wolbachia might employ to manipulate host sex.

基于细胞的测定和比较基因组学揭示了沃尔巴克氏菌对昆虫性别决定的保守和隐性影响。
母体传播的内生细菌使宿主的性别比例偏向雌性是有利的。一些内生细菌,如沃尔巴克氏菌,通过雄性杀伤(MK)或雌性化,使昆虫宿主只产生雌性后代。在一些鳞翅目昆虫中,杀雄是通过影响雄虫的性别决定过程来实现的,杀雄的独特机制及其与雌性化的功能联系已被证实。然而,对这些表型进行比较分析往往很困难,因为它们是在不同的宿主-共生体系统中进行分析的,而且在不同宿主间转染沃尔巴克氏体往往具有挑战性。在本研究中,我们利用细胞培养系统,通过固定宿主遗传背景,证明了九种狼杆菌菌株对鳞翅目昆虫性别决定基因剪接的影响。细胞转染试验证实,3株MK诱导型狼杆菌和1株雌性化诱导型狼杆菌增加了核心性别决定基因doublesex、masculinizer和锌指蛋白2的雌性化剪接产物。比较基因组学证实,4 个诱导MK/雌性化的狼杆菌菌株编码了Oscar的同源物,而5 个非诱导MK/雌性化的狼杆菌菌株没有编码Oscar。这些结果支持了嗜猩狼杆菌诱导MK和雌性化的保守效应,并提出了狼杆菌操纵宿主性别的其他潜在机制。
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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CiteScore
1.80
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