Heterogeneous distribution of Cardinium in whitefly populations is associated with host nuclear genetic background

Author:

Li Hongran12ORCID,Liu Ying1ORCID,Wei Xiaoying1,Pan Huipeng3ORCID,Zhang Youjun4ORCID,Zhou Xuguo5ORCID,Chu Dong1

Affiliation:

1. Shandong Engineering Research Center for Environment‐Friendly Agricultural Pest Management, College of Plant Health and Medicine Qingdao Agricultural University Qingdao Shangdong Province China

2. Shenzhen Branch, Guangdong Laboratory of Lingnan Modern Agriculture, Key Laboratory of Gene Editing Technologies (Hainan), Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs, Agricultural Genomics Institute at Shenzhen Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences Shenzhen Guangdong Province China

3. Key Laboratory of Bio‐Pesticide Innovation and Application of Guangdong Province South China Agricultural University Guangzhou China

4. Department of Plant Protection, Institute of Vegetables and Flowers Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences Beijing China

5. Department of Entomology University of Kentucky Lexington Kentucky USA

Abstract

AbstractInherited bacterial symbionts are very common in arthropods, but infection frequency can vary widely among populations. Experiments and interpopulation comparisons suggest that host genetic background might be important in explaining this variation. Our extensive field investigation showed that the infection pattern of the facultative symbiont Cardinium was heterogeneous across geographical populations of the invasive whitefly Bemisia tabaci Mediterranean (MED) in China, with genetic nuclear differences evident in 2 of the populations: 1 with a low infection rate (SD line) and 1 with a high infection rate (HaN line). However, whether the heterogeneous frequency of Cardinium is associated with the host genetic background remains poorly understood. Here, we compared the fitness of the Cardinium‐infected and uninfected sublines with similar nuclear genetic backgrounds from SD and HaN lines, respectively, and further determine whether host extranuclear or nuclear genotype influenced the Cardinium–host phenotype by performing 2 new introgression series of 6 generations between SD and HaN lines (i.e., Cardinium‐infected females of SD were backcrossed with uninfected males of HaN, and vice versa). The results showed that Cardinium provides marginal fitness benefits in the SD line, whereas Cardinium provides strong fitness benefits in the HaN line. Further, both Cardinium and the Cardinium–host nuclear interaction influence the fecundity and pre‐adult survival rate of B. tabaci, whereas the extranuclear genotype does not. In conclusion, our results provide evidence that Cardinium‐mediated fitness effects were closely associated with the host genetic background, which provides a fundamental basis for understanding the mechanism underlying the heterogeneous distribution of Cardinium in B. tabaci MED populations across China.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Insect Science,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,Agronomy and Crop Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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