Abstract

ABSTRACTMembers of the genus Rickettsiella are bacterial pathogens of insects and other arthropods. Recently, a novel facultative endosymbiont, “Candidatus Rickettsiella viridis,” was described in the pea aphid Acyrthosiphon pisum, whose infection causes a striking host phenotype: red and green genetic color morphs exist in aphid populations, and upon infection with the symbiont, red aphids become green due to increased production of green polycyclic quinone pigments. Here we determined the complete genome sequence of the symbiont. The 1.6-Mb circular genome, harboring some 1,400 protein-coding genes, was similar to the genome of entomopathogenic Rickettsiella grylli (1.6 Mb) but was smaller than the genomes of phylogenetically allied human pathogens Coxiella burnetii (2.0 Mb) and Legionella pneumophila (3.4 Mb). The symbiont’s metabolic pathways exhibited little complementarity to those of the coexisting primary symbiont Buchnera aphidicola, reflecting the facultative nature of the symbiont. The symbiont genome harbored neither polyketide synthase genes nor the evolutionarily allied fatty acid synthase genes that are suspected to catalyze the polycyclic quinone synthesis, indicating that the green pigments are produced not by the symbiont but by the host aphid. The symbiont genome retained many type IV secretion system genes and presumable effector protein genes, whose homologues in L. pneumophila were reported to modulate a variety of the host's cellular processes for facilitating infection and virulence. These results suggest the possibility that the symbiont is involved in the green pigment production by affecting the host’s metabolism using the secretion machineries for delivering the effector molecules into the host cells.

Highlights

  • Members of the genus Rickettsiella are bacterial pathogens of insects and other arthropods

  • Exhibited significant sequence similarities to known polyketide synthase genes in their full lengths. These results suggest that biosynthesis genes for green polycyclic quinone pigments are not harbored in the “Ca. Rickettsiella viridis” genome but are likely harbored in the host aphid genome

  • The genome of “Ca. Rickettsiella viridis” determined in this study, which is the first completely determined genome of a Rickettsiella species, illuminates the nature of the bacterium as a moderately genome-reduced, facultative endosymbiont of the aphid A. pisum which is phylogenetically allied to entomopathogenic Rickettsiella species

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Summary

Introduction

Members of the genus Rickettsiella are bacterial pathogens of insects and other arthropods. The symbiont genome retained many type IV secretion system genes and presumable effector protein genes, whose homologues in L. pneumophila were reported to modulate a variety of the host’s cellular processes for facilitating infection and virulence. These results suggest the possibility that the symbiont is involved in the green pigment production by affecting the host’s metabolism using the secretion machineries for delivering the effector molecules into the host cells. In addition to B. aphidicola, A. pisum frequently harbors facultative bacterial symbionts such as Serratia symbiotica, Regiella insecticola, Hamiltonella defensa, Rickettsia sp., Spiroplasma sp., and others [14,15,16,17,18], which can have a variety of effects on the host’s phenotypes with ecological consequences, including resistance to parasitoid wasps [19], protection against pathogenic fungi [20], tolerance to elevated temperature [10], influence on food plant range [11], and skewing of sex ratios [21]

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