Abstract

Bacterial endosymbionts of insects play a central role in upgrading the diet of their hosts. In certain cases, such as aphids and tsetse flies, endosymbionts complement the metabolic capacity of hosts living on nutrient-deficient diets, while the bacteria harbored by omnivorous carpenter ants are involved in nitrogen recycling. In this study, we describe the genome sequence and inferred metabolism of Blattabacterium strain Bge, the primary Flavobacteria endosymbiont of the omnivorous German cockroach Blattella germanica. Through comparative genomics with other insect endosymbionts and free-living Flavobacteria we reveal that Blattabacterium strain Bge shares the same distribution of functional gene categories only with Blochmannia strains, the primary Gamma-Proteobacteria endosymbiont of carpenter ants. This is a remarkable example of evolutionary convergence during the symbiotic process, involving very distant phylogenetic bacterial taxa within hosts feeding on similar diets. Despite this similarity, different nitrogen economy strategies have emerged in each case. Both bacterial endosymbionts code for urease but display different metabolic functions: Blochmannia strains produce ammonia from dietary urea and then use it as a source of nitrogen, whereas Blattabacterium strain Bge codes for the complete urea cycle that, in combination with urease, produces ammonia as an end product. Not only does the cockroach endosymbiont play an essential role in nutrient supply to the host, but also in the catabolic use of amino acids and nitrogen excretion, as strongly suggested by the stoichiometric analysis of the inferred metabolic network. Here, we explain the metabolic reasons underlying the enigmatic return of cockroaches to the ancestral ammonotelic state.

Highlights

  • In 1887, Blochmann first described symbiotic bacteria in the fatty tissue of blattids [1]

  • Bacterial endosymbionts from insects are subjected to a process of genome reduction from the moment they interact with their host, especially when the symbiosis is strict and the endosymbiont is maternally inherited

  • We report the genome sequence of Blattabacterium strain Bge, the primary endosymbiont of the German cockroach B. germanica

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Summary

Introduction

In 1887, Blochmann first described symbiotic bacteria in the fatty tissue of blattids [1]. Several pioneering studies correlated the presence of cockroach endosymbionts with the metabolism of sulfate and amino acids [3,4] These endosymbionts were classified as a genus Blattabacterium [4], belonging to the class Flavobacteria in the phylum Bacteroidetes [5] and they live in specialized cells in the host’s abdominal fat body. The highly reduced genome of ‘‘Candidatus Sulcia muelleri’’ ( S. muelleri), an insect endosymbiont belonging to the class Flavobacteria has been completely sequenced [10] Primary endosymbionts such as Buchnera aphidicola or Wigglesworthia glossinidia complement the metabolic capacity of aphids or tsetse flies, respectively that feed on different nutrient-deficient diets [11]. This is the case of S. muelleri, living in the sharpshooter Homalodisca

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