Abstract
Stable associations between bacterial endosymbionts and insect hosts provide opportunities to explore genome evolution in the context of established mutualisms and assess the roles of selection and genetic drift across host lineages and habitats. Blochmannia, obligate endosymbionts of ants of the tribe Camponotini, have coevolved with their ant hosts for ∼40 MY. To investigate early events in Blochmannia genome evolution across this ant host tribe, we sequenced Blochmannia from two divergent host lineages, Colobopsis obliquus and Polyrhachis turneri, and compared them with four published genomes from Blochmannia of Camponotus sensu stricto. Reconstructed gene content of the last common ancestor (LCA) of these six Blochmannia genomes is reduced (690 protein coding genes), consistent with rapid gene loss soon after establishment of the symbiosis. Differential gene loss among Blochmannia lineages has affected cellular functions and metabolic pathways, including DNA replication and repair, vitamin biosynthesis and membrane proteins. Blochmannia of P. turneri (i.e., B. turneri) encodes an intact DnaA chromosomal replication initiation protein, demonstrating that loss of dnaA was not essential for establishment of the symbiosis. Based on gene content, B. obliquus and B. turneri are unable to provision hosts with riboflavin. Of the six sequenced Blochmannia, B. obliquus is the earliest diverging lineage (i.e., the sister group of other Blochmannia sampled) and encodes the fewest protein-coding genes and the most pseudogenes. We identified 55 genes involved in parallel gene loss, including glutamine synthetase, which may participate in nitrogen recycling. Pathways for biosynthesis of coenzyme A, terpenoids and riboflavin were lost in multiple lineages, suggesting relaxed selection on the pathway after inactivation of one component. Analysis of Illumina read datasets did not detect evidence of plasmids encoding missing functions, nor the presence of coresident symbionts other than Wolbachia. Although gene order is strictly conserved in four Blochmannia of Camponotus sensu stricto, comparisons with deeply divergent lineages revealed inversions in eight genomic regions, indicating ongoing recombination despite ancestral loss of recA. In sum, the addition of two Blochmannia genomes of divergent host lineages enables reconstruction of early events in evolution of this symbiosis and suggests that Blochmannia lineages may experience distinct, host-associated selective pressures. Understanding how evolutionary forces shape genome reduction in this system may help to clarify forces driving gene loss in other bacteria, including intracellular pathogens.
Highlights
The evolution of stable mutualisms between bacteria and insects has occurred many times and involves phylogenetically diverse lineages (Moran, McCutcheon & Nakabachi, 2008; Moya et al, 2008; Kikuchi, 2009; Douglas, 2015)
We examined the taxonomic assignments of the top hits to identify genes with high scoring alignments to bacteria outside of the Enterobacteriaceae, which may support the hypothesis of horizontal gene transfer
B. obliquus is the earliest diverging Blochmannia lineage sequenced To determine the evolutionary relationships of the Blochmannia lineages, we constructed a phylogeny of 30 randomly selected protein-coding genes shared among Blochmannia genomes and the outgroups Baumannia, Hamiltonella and Sodalis
Summary
The evolution of stable mutualisms between bacteria and insects has occurred many times and involves phylogenetically diverse lineages (Moran, McCutcheon & Nakabachi, 2008; Moya et al, 2008; Kikuchi, 2009; Douglas, 2015) In many of these symbioses, the limited diets of insect hosts are supplemented by an intracellular bacterial partner. Cockroaches and ants of the tribe Camponotini are generally considered omnivores with complex diets Their bacterial partners, Blattabacterium and Blochmannia, respectively, synthesize essential amino acids and participate in nitrogen recycling (Gil et al, 2003; Lopez-Sanchez et al, 2009; Sabree, Kambhampati & Moran, 2009). In the case of Blochmannia, its nutritional role may be most important at particular stages of the host’s lifecycle (Zientz et al, 2006; Feldhaar et al, 2007; Stoll et al, 2010)
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