Primary Gut Symbiont and Secondary, Sodalis -Allied Symbiont of the Scutellerid Stinkbug Cantao ocellatus

Author:

Kaiwa Nahomi1,Hosokawa Takahiro2,Kikuchi Yoshitomo2,Nikoh Naruo3,Meng Xian Ying2,Kimura Nobutada2,Ito Motomi1,Fukatsu Takema2

Affiliation:

1. Department of General Systems Studies, Graduate School of Arts and Science, The University of Tokyo, Tokyo 153-8902, Japan

2. National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST), Tsukuba 305-8566, Japan

3. Department of Liberal Arts, The Open University of Japan, Chiba 261-8586, Japan

Abstract

ABSTRACT Symbiotic associations with midgut bacteria have been commonly found in diverse phytophagous heteropteran groups, where microbiological characterization of the symbiotic bacteria has been restricted to the stinkbug families Acanthosomatidae, Plataspidae, Pentatomidae, Alydidae, and Pyrrhocoridae. Here we investigated the midgut bacterial symbiont of Cantao ocellatus , a stinkbug of the family Scutelleridae. A specific gammaproteobacterium was consistently identified from the insects of different geographic origins. The bacterium was detected in all 116 insects collected from 9 natural host populations. Phylogenetic analyses revealed that the bacterium constitutes a distinct lineage in the Gammaproteobacteria , not closely related to gut symbionts of other stinkbugs. Diagnostic PCR and in situ hybridization demonstrated that the bacterium is extracellularly located in the midgut 4th section with crypts. Electron microscopy of the crypts revealed a peculiar histological configuration at the host-symbiont interface. Egg sterilization experiments confirmed that the bacterium is vertically transmitted to stinkbug nymphs via egg surface contamination. In addition to the gut symbiont, some individuals of C. ocellatus harbored another bacterial symbiont in their gonads, which was closely related to Sodalis glossinidius , the secondary endosymbiont of tsetse flies. Biological aspects of the primary gut symbiont and the secondary Sodalis -allied symbiont are discussed.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology

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