A new cytogenetic mechanism for bacterial endosymbiont-induced parthenogenesis in Hymenoptera

Author:

Adachi-Hagimori Tetsuya12,Miura Kazuki13,Stouthamer Richard4

Affiliation:

1. Graduate School of Biosphere Sciences, Hiroshima UniversityHigashi-Hiroshima, Hiroshima 739-8511, Japan

2. Japan Society for the Promotion of ScienceChiyoda-ku, Tokyo 102-8471, Japan

3. National Agricultural Research Center for Western RegionFukuyama, Hiroshima 721-8514, Japan

4. Department of Entomology, University of CaliforniaRiverside, CA 92521, USA

Abstract

Vertically transmitted endosymbiotic bacteria, such as Wolbachia , Cardinium and Rickettsia , modify host reproduction in several ways to facilitate their own spread. One such modification results in parthenogenesis induction, where males, which are unable to transmit the bacteria, are not produced. In Hymenoptera, the mechanism of diploidization due to Wolbachia infection, known as gamete duplication, is a post-meiotic modification. During gamete duplication, the meiotic mechanism is normal, but in the first mitosis the anaphase is aborted. The two haploid sets of chromosomes do not separate and thus result in a single nucleus containing two identical sets of haploid chromosomes. Here, we outline an alternative cytogenetic mechanism for bacterial endosymbiont-induced parthenogenesis in Hymenoptera. During female gamete formation in Rickettsia -infected Neochrysocharis formosa (Westwood) parasitoids, meiotic cells undergo only a single equational division followed by the expulsion of a single polar body. This absence of meiotic recombination and reduction corresponds well with a non-segregation pattern in the offspring of heterozygous females. We conclude that diploidy in N. formosa is maintained through a functionally apomictic cloning mechanism that differs entirely from the mechanism induced by Wolbachia .

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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