Abstract
Heritable symbionts are common in insects with many contributing to host defence.
Hamiltonella defensa
is a facultative, bacterial symbiont of the pea aphid,
Acyrthosiphon pisum
that provides protection against the endoparasitoid wasp
Aphidius ervi
. Protection levels vary among strains of
H. defensa
that are differentially infected by bacteriophages named APSEs. By contrast, little is known about mechanism(s) of resistance owing to the intractability of host-restricted microbes for functional study. Here, we developed methods for culturing strains of
H. defensa
that varied in the presence and type of APSE. Most
H. defensa
strains proliferated at 27°C in co-cultures with the TN5 cell line or as pure cultures with no insect cells. The strain infected by APSE3, which provides high levels of protection
in vivo
, produced a soluble factor(s) that disabled development of
A. ervi
embryos independent of any aphid factors. Experimental transfer of APSE3 also conferred the ability to disable
A. ervi
development to a phage-free strain of
H. defensa
. Altogether, these results provide a critical foundation for characterizing symbiont-derived factor(s) involved in host protection and other functions. Our results also demonstrate that phage-mediated transfer of traits provides a mechanism for innovation in host restricted symbionts.
Funder
Division of Integrative Organismal Systems
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine
Cited by
84 articles.
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