Affiliation:
1. Institute of Agrobiological Sciences, National Agriculture and Food Research Organization (NARO), 1-2 Owashi, Tsukuba, Ibaraki 305-0851, Japan
2. Laboratory of Applied Entomology, University of Miyazaki, 1-1 Gakuenkibanadai-Nishi, Miyazaki 889-2192, Japan
Abstract
Rickettsia
, a group of intracellular bacteria found in eukaryotes, exhibits diverse lifestyles, with some acting as vertebrate pathogens transmitted by arthropod vectors and others serving as maternally transmitted arthropod endosymbionts, some of which manipulate host reproduction for their own benefit. Two phenotypes, namely male-killing and parthenogenesis induction are known as
Rickettsia
-induced host reproductive manipulations, but it remains unknown whether
Rickettsia
can induce other types of host manipulation. In this study, we discovered that
Rickettsia
induced strong cytoplasmic incompatibility (CI), in which uninfected females produce no offspring when mated with infected males, in the predatory insect
Nesidiocoris tenuis
(Hemiptera: Miridae). Molecular phylogenetic analysis revealed that the
Rickettsia
strain was related to
Rickettsia bellii
, a common insect endosymbiont. Notably, this strain carried plasmid-encoded homologues of the CI-inducing factors (namely
cifA
-like and
cifB
-like genes), typically found in
Wolbachia
, which are well-known CI-inducing endosymbionts. Protein domain prediction revealed that the
cifB
-like gene encodes PD-(D/E)XK nuclease and deubiquitinase domains, which are responsible for
Wolbachia
-induced CI, as well as ovarian tumour-like (OTU-like) cysteine protease and ankyrin repeat domains. These findings suggest that
Rickettsia
and
Wolbachia
endosymbionts share underlying mechanisms of CI and that CI-inducing ability was acquired by microbes through horizontal plasmid transfer.
Funder
Moonshot Research and Development Program