Affiliation:
1. Department of Developmental Biology and Morphology of Invertebrates, Institute of Zoology and Biomedical Research, Faculty of Biology, Jagiellonian University, Krakow, Poland
2. Institute of Environmental Sciences, Faculty of Biology, Jagiellonian University, Krakow, Poland
3. Museum and Institute of Zoology, Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw, Poland
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Transovarial transmission is the most reliable way of passing on essential nutrient-providing endosymbionts from mothers to offspring. However, not all endosymbiotic microbes follow the complex path through the female host tissues to oocytes on their own. Here, we demonstrate an unusual transmission strategy adopted by one of the endosymbionts of the planthopper
Trypetimorpha occidentalis
(Hemiptera: Tropiduchidae) from Bulgaria. In this species, an
Acetobacteraceae
endosymbiont is transmitted transovarially within deep invaginations of cellular membranes of an ancient endosymbiont
Sulcia
—strikingly resembling recently described plant virus transmission. However, in males,
Acetobacteraceae
colonizes the same bacteriocytes as
Sulcia
but remains unenveloped. Then, the unusual endobacterial localization of
Acetobacteraceae
observed in females appears to be a unique adaptation to maternal transmission. Further, the symbiont’s genomic features, including encoding essential amino acid biosynthetic pathways and its similarity to a recently described psyllid symbiont, suggest a unique combination of the ability to horizontally transmit among species and confer nutritional benefits. The close association with
Acetobacteraceae
symbiont correlates with the so-far-unreported level of genomic erosion of ancient nutritional symbionts of this planthopper. In
Sulcia
, this is reflected in substantial changes in genomic organization, reported for the first time in the symbiont renowned for its genomic stability. In
Vidania
, substantial gene loss resulted in one of the smallest genomes known, at 108.6 kb. Thus, the symbionts of
T. occidentalis
display a combination of unusual adaptations and genomic features that expand our understanding of how insect–microbe symbioses may transmit and evolve.
IMPORTANCE
Reliable transmission across host generations is a major challenge for bacteria that associate with insects, and independently established symbionts have addressed this challenge in different ways. The facultatively endobacterial localization of
Acetobacteraceae
symbiont, enveloped by cells of ancient nutritional endosymbiont
Sulcia
in females but not males of the planthopper
Trypetimorpha occidentalis
, appears to be a unique adaptation to maternal transmission.
Acetobacteraceae
’s genomic features indicate its unusual evolutionary history, and the genomic erosion experienced by ancient nutritional symbionts demonstrates the apparent consequences of such close association. Combined, this multi-partite symbiosis expands our understanding of the diversity of strategies that insect symbioses form and some of their evolutionary consequences.
Funder
Narodowe Centrum Nauki
Narodowa Agencja Wymiany Akademickiej
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology