No Transcriptional Compensation for Extreme Gene Dosage Imbalance in Fragmented Bacterial Endosymbionts of Cicadas

Author:

Spencer Noah1ORCID,Łukasik Piotr23,Meyer Mariah24,Veloso Claudio5,McCutcheon John P126

Affiliation:

1. Biodesign Center for Mechanisms of Evolution and School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University , Tempe, Arizona , USA

2. Division of Biological Sciences, University of Montana , Missoula, Montana , USA

3. Institute of Environmental Sciences, Jagiellonian University , Kraków , Poland

4. Department of Biomedical Informatics, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus , Aurora, Colorado , USA

5. Department of Ecological Sciences, Science Faculty, University of Chile , Santiago , Chile

6. Howard Hughes Medical Institute , Chevy Chase, Maryland , USA

Abstract

Abstract Bacteria that form long-term intracellular associations with host cells lose many genes, a process that often results in tiny, gene-dense, and stable genomes. Paradoxically, the some of the same evolutionary processes that drive genome reduction and simplification may also cause genome expansion and complexification. A bacterial endosymbiont of cicadas, Hodgkinia cicadicola, exemplifies this paradox. In many cicada species, a single Hodgkinia lineage with a tiny, gene-dense genome has split into several interdependent cell and genome lineages. Each new Hodgkinia lineage encodes a unique subset of the ancestral unsplit genome in a complementary way, such that the collective gene contents of all lineages match the total found in the ancestral single genome. This splitting creates genetically distinct Hodgkinia cells that must function together to carry out basic cellular processes. It also creates a gene dosage problem where some genes are encoded by only a small fraction of cells while others are much more abundant. Here, by sequencing DNA and RNA of Hodgkinia from different cicada species with different amounts of splitting—along with its structurally stable, unsplit partner endosymbiont Sulcia muelleri—we show that Hodgkinia does not transcriptionally compensate to rescue the wildly unbalanced gene and genome ratios that result from lineage splitting. We also find that Hodgkinia has a reduced capacity for basic transcriptional control independent of the splitting process. Our findings reveal another layer of degeneration further pushing the limits of canonical molecular and cell biology in Hodgkinia and may partially explain its propensity to go extinct through symbiont replacement.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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