A dual endosymbiosis supports nutritional adaptation to hematophagy in the invasive tick Hyalomma marginatum

Author:

Buysse Marie12ORCID,Floriano Anna Maria34,Gottlieb Yuval5,Nardi Tiago3ORCID,Comandatore Francesco6,Olivieri Emanuela3,Giannetto Alessia7,Palomar Ana M8ORCID,Makepeace Benjamin L9,Bazzocchi Chiara10,Cafiso Alessandra10,Sassera Davide3,Duron Olivier12

Affiliation:

1. MIVEGEC (Maladies Infectieuses et Vecteurs : Ecologie, Génétique, Evolution et Contrôle), Univ. Montpellier (UM) - Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS) - Institut pour la Recherche et le Développement (IRD)

2. Centre of Research in Ecology and Evolution of Diseases (CREES), Montpellier, France

3. Department of Biology and Biotechnology “L. Spallanzani”, University of Pavia

4. Faculty of Science, University of South Bohemia

5. Koret School of Veterinary Medicine, The Robert H. Smith Faculty of Agriculture, Food and Environment, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem

6. Department of Biomedical and Clinical Sciences L. Sacco and Pediatric Clinical Research Center, University of Milan

7. Department of Chemical, Biological, Pharmaceutical and Environmental Sciences, University of Messina

8. Center of Rickettsiosis and Arthropod-Borne Diseases (CRETAV), San Pedro University Hospital- Center of Biomedical Research from La Rioja (CIBIR)

9. Institute of Infection, Veterinary & Ecological Sciences, University of Liverpool

10. Department of Veterinary Medicine, University of Milan

Abstract

Many animals are dependent on microbial partners that provide essential nutrients lacking from their diet. Ticks, whose diet consists exclusively on vertebrate blood, rely on maternally inherited bacterial symbionts to supply B vitamins. While previously studied tick species consistently harbor a single lineage of those nutritional symbionts, we evidence here that the invasive tick Hyalomma marginatum harbors a unique dual-partner nutritional system between an ancestral symbiont, Francisella, and a more recently acquired symbiont, Midichloria. Using metagenomics, we show that Francisella exhibits extensive genome erosion that endangers the nutritional symbiotic interactions. Its genome includes folate and riboflavin biosynthesis pathways but deprived functional biotin biosynthesis on account of massive pseudogenization. Co-symbiosis compensates this deficiency since the Midichloria genome encompasses an intact biotin operon, which was primarily acquired via lateral gene transfer from unrelated intracellular bacteria commonly infecting arthropods. Thus, in H. marginatum, a mosaic of co-evolved symbionts incorporating gene combinations of distant phylogenetic origins emerged to prevent the collapse of an ancestral nutritional symbiosis. Such dual endosymbiosis was never reported in other blood feeders but was recently documented in agricultural pests feeding on plant sap, suggesting that it may be a key mechanism for advanced adaptation of arthropods to specialized diets.

Funder

Ministry of Science, Technology and Space

Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique

Israel Science Foundation

Human Frontier Science Program

Ministry of Education, University and Research

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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