Facultative symbiont virulence determines horizontal transmission rate without host specificity in Dictyostelium discoideum social amoebas

Author:

Noh Suegene1ORCID,Peck Ron F1,Larson Emily R1,Covitz Rachel M2,Chen Anna1,Roy Prachee1,Hamilton Marisa C3,Dettmann Robert A4

Affiliation:

1. Biology Department, Colby College , Waterville, ME , United States

2. Department of Developmental, Molecular, and Chemical Biology, Tufts University School of Medicine , Boston, MA , United States

3. University Program in Genetics and Genomics, Duke University , Durham, NC , United States

4. Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health , Baltimore, MD , United States

Abstract

Abstract In facultative symbioses, only a fraction of hosts are associated with symbionts. Specific host and symbiont pairings may be the result of host–symbiont coevolution driven by reciprocal selection or priority effects pertaining to which potential symbiont is associated with a host first. Distinguishing between these possibilities is important for understanding the evolutionary forces that affect facultative symbioses. We used the social amoeba, Dictyostelium discoideum, and its symbiont, Paraburkholderia bonniea, to determine whether ongoing coevolution affects which host–symbiont strain pairs naturally cooccur within a facultative symbiosis. Relative to other Paraburkholderia, including another symbiont of D. discoideum, P. bonniea features a reduced genome size that indicates a significant history of coevolution with its host. We hypothesized that ongoing host–symbiont coevolution would lead to higher fitness for naturally cooccurring (native) host and symbiont pairings compared to novel pairings. We show for the first time that P. bonniea symbionts can horizontally transmit to new amoeba hosts when hosts aggregate together during the social stage of their life cycle. Here we find evidence for a virulence–transmission trade-off without host specificity. Although symbiont strains were significantly variable in virulence and horizontal transmission rate, hosts and symbionts responded similarly to associations in native and novel pairings. We go on to identify candidate virulence factors in the genomes of P. bonniea strains that may contribute to variation in virulence. We conclude that ongoing coevolution is unlikely for D. discoideum and P. bonniea. The system instead appears to represent a stable facultative symbiosis in which naturally cooccurring P. bonniea host and symbiont pairings are the result of priority effects.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

National Institute of General Medical Sciences

Institutional Development Award

Colby College startup funds

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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