Abstract

BackgroundWolbachia and Cardinium are endosymbiotic bacteria infecting many arthropods and manipulating host reproduction. Although these bacteria are maternally transmitted, incongruencies between phylogenies of host and parasite suggest an additional role for occasional horizontal transmission. Consistent with this view is the strong evidence for recombination in Wolbachia, although it is less clear to what extent recombination drives diversification within single host species and genera. Furthermore, little is known concerning the population structures of other insect endosymbionts which co-infect with Wolbachia, such as Cardinium. Here, we explore Wolbachia and Cardinium strain diversity within nine spider mite species (Tetranychidae) from 38 populations, and quantify the contribution of recombination compared to point mutation in generating Wolbachia diversity.ResultsWe found a high level of genetic diversity for Wolbachia, with 36 unique strains detected (64 investigated mite individuals). Sequence data from four Wolbachia genes suggest that new alleles are 7.5 to 11 times more likely to be generated by recombination than point mutation. Consistent with previous reports on more diverse host samples, our data did not reveal evidence for co-evolution of Wolbachia with its host. Cardinium was less frequently found in the mites, but also showed a high level of diversity, with eight unique strains detected in 15 individuals on the basis of only two genes. A lack of congruence among host and Cardinium phylogenies was observed.ConclusionsWe found a high rate of recombination for Wolbachia strains obtained from host species of the spider mite family Tetranychidae, comparable to rates found for horizontally transmitted bacteria. This suggests frequent horizontal transmission of Wolbachia and/or frequent horizontal transfer of single genes. Our findings strengthens earlier reports of recombination for Wolbachia, and shows that high recombination rates are also present on strains from a restrictive host range. Cardinium was found co-infecting several spider mite species, and phylogenetic comparisons suggest also horizontal transmission of Cardinium among hosts.

Highlights

  • Wolbachia and Cardinium are endosymbiotic bacteria infecting many arthropods and manipulating host reproduction

  • We included Wolbachia strains from seven Bryobia species

  • We were unable to reliably determine the infection status of the other Bryobia host species (Figure 1) due to the lack of adequate material and/or inconsistent amplification of the bacterial genes, these species were excluded from further analyses

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Summary

Introduction

Wolbachia and Cardinium are endosymbiotic bacteria infecting many arthropods and manipulating host reproduction These bacteria are maternally transmitted, incongruencies between phylogenies of host and parasite suggest an additional role for occasional horizontal transmission. Consistent with this view is the strong evidence for recombination in Wolbachia, it is less clear to what extent recombination drives diversification within single host species and genera. Wolbachia and Cardinium are intracellular bacteria infecting a wide range of arthropod species They have been classified as reproductive parasites, being able to manipulate their host’s reproductive system in order to promote their own transmission [1,2,3]. Such patterns suggest horizontal transmission of bacteria (or at least of some bacterial genes) between hosts, direct evidence for horizontal transmission is rare [30,31,32]

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