Prophage-encoded Hm-oscar gene recapitulates Wolbachia-induced male killing in the tea tortrix moth Homona magnanima

Author:

Arai Hiroshi12ORCID,Katsuma Susumu3ORCID,Matsuda-Imai Noriko3ORCID,Lin Shiou-Ruei4ORCID,Inoue Maki N2ORCID,Kageyama Daisuke1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. National Agriculture and Food Research Organization (NARO)

2. United Graduate School of Agricultural Science, Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology

3. Department of Agricultural and Environmental Biology, Graduate School of Agricultural and Life Sciences, The University of Tokyo

4. Crop Environment Section, Tea and Beverage Research Station, Ministry of Agriculture

Abstract

Wolbachia are the maternally transmitted bacterial symbionts that are ubiquitous among arthropods. They can hijack host reproduction in various ways, including male killing (MK), where the sons of infected mothers are killed during development. The recent discovery of MK-associated Wolbachia genes, i.e., oscar in Ostrinia moths and wmk in Drosophila flies, stimulates our interest in the diversity and commonality of MK mechanisms, which remain largely unclear. We recently discovered that a Wolbachia symbiont of the moth Homona magnanima carries an MK-associated prophage region encoding homologs of oscar ( Hm-oscar ) and wmk ( wmk- 1–4). Here, we investigated the effects of these genes in the native host. Upon transient overexpression, Hm-oscar , but not wmk , induced male lethality in H. magnanima , in contrast to our observations in Drosophila , where the wmk homologs, but not Hm-oscar , killed the males. Hm-oscar disrupted sex determination in male embryos by inducing a female-type doublesex splicing and impaired dosage compensation, recapitulating the Wolbachia phenotype. Cell-based transfection assays confirmed that Hm-oscar suppressed the function of masculinizer , the upstream male sex determinant involved in lepidopteran dosage compensation. Our study highlights the conserved roles of oscar homologs in Wolbachia -induced lepidopteran MK and argues that Wolbachia have evolved multiple MK mechanisms in insects.

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

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