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Masson F, Moné Y, Vigneron A, Vallier A, Parisot N, Vincent-Monégat C, Balmand S, Carpentier MC, Zaidman-Rémy A, Heddi A. Weevil endosymbiont dynamics is associated with a clamping of immunity. BMC Genomics 2015; 16:819. [PMID: 26482132 PMCID: PMC4617454 DOI: 10.1186/s12864-015-2048-5] [Citation(s) in RCA: 22] [Impact Index Per Article: 2.4] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Download PDF] [Figures] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 06/30/2015] [Accepted: 10/08/2015] [Indexed: 12/13/2022] Open
Abstract
BACKGROUND Insects subsisting on nutritionally unbalanced diets have evolved long-term mutualistic relationships with intracellular symbiotic bacteria (endosymbionts). The endosymbiont population load undergoes changes along with insect development. In the cereal weevil Sitophilus oryzae, the midgut endosymbionts Sodalis pierantonius drastically multiply following adult metamorphosis and rapidly decline until total elimination when the insect achieves its cuticle synthesis. Whilst symbiont load was shown to timely meet insect metabolic needs, little is known about the host molecular and immune processes underlying this dynamics. METHODS We performed RNA sequencing analysis on weevil midguts at three representative phases of the endosymbiont dynamics (i.e. increase, climax and decrease). To screen genes which transcriptional changes are specifically related to symbiont dynamics and not to the intrinsic development of the midgut, we further have monitored by RT-qPCR sixteen gene transcript levels in symbiotic and artificially non-symbiotic (aposymbiotic) weevils. We also localized the endosymbionts during the elimination process by fluorescence microscopy. RESULTS Functional analysis of the host differentially expressed genes by RNA sequencing showed that the main transcriptional changes occur during endosymbiont growth phase and affect cell proliferation, apoptosis, autophagy, phagocytosis, and metabolism of fatty acids and nucleic acids. We also showed that symbiont dynamics alters the expression of several genes involved in insect development. Our results strengthened the implication of apoptosis and autophagy processes in symbiont elimination and recycling. Remarkably, apart from the coleoptericin A that is known to target endosymbionts and controls their division and location, no gene coding antimicrobial peptide was upregulated during the symbiont growth and elimination phases. CONCLUSION We show that endosymbiont dynamics parallels numerous transcriptional changes in weevil developing adults and affects several biological processes, including metabolism and development. It also triggers cell apoptosis, autophagy and gut epithelial cell swelling and delamination. Strikingly, immunity is repressed during the whole process, presumably avoiding tissue inflammation and allowing insects to optimize nutrient recovery from recycled endosymbiont.
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Affiliation(s)
- Florent Masson
- Université de Lyon, INSA-Lyon, INRA, UMR203 BF2I, Biologie Fonctionnelle Insectes et Interactions, F-69621, Villeurbanne, France.
| | - Yves Moné
- Université de Lyon, INSA-Lyon, INRA, UMR203 BF2I, Biologie Fonctionnelle Insectes et Interactions, F-69621, Villeurbanne, France. .,Present address: Université Montpellier 2, INRA, UMR 1333 DGIMI, Diversité, Génomes et Interactions Micro-Organismes Insectes, F-34095, Montpellier, France.
| | - Aurélien Vigneron
- Université de Lyon, INSA-Lyon, INRA, UMR203 BF2I, Biologie Fonctionnelle Insectes et Interactions, F-69621, Villeurbanne, France. .,Present address: Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, Division of Epidemiology of Microbial Diseases, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, USA.
| | - Agnès Vallier
- Université de Lyon, INSA-Lyon, INRA, UMR203 BF2I, Biologie Fonctionnelle Insectes et Interactions, F-69621, Villeurbanne, France.
| | - Nicolas Parisot
- Université de Lyon, INSA-Lyon, INRA, UMR203 BF2I, Biologie Fonctionnelle Insectes et Interactions, F-69621, Villeurbanne, France.
| | - Carole Vincent-Monégat
- Université de Lyon, INSA-Lyon, INRA, UMR203 BF2I, Biologie Fonctionnelle Insectes et Interactions, F-69621, Villeurbanne, France.
| | - Séverine Balmand
- Université de Lyon, INSA-Lyon, INRA, UMR203 BF2I, Biologie Fonctionnelle Insectes et Interactions, F-69621, Villeurbanne, France.
| | - Marie-Christine Carpentier
- Université de Lyon, CNRS, UMR5558 LBBE, Laboratoire de Biométrie et de Biologie Évolutive, F-69621, Villeurbanne, France.
| | - Anna Zaidman-Rémy
- Université de Lyon, INSA-Lyon, INRA, UMR203 BF2I, Biologie Fonctionnelle Insectes et Interactions, F-69621, Villeurbanne, France.
| | - Abdelaziz Heddi
- Université de Lyon, INSA-Lyon, INRA, UMR203 BF2I, Biologie Fonctionnelle Insectes et Interactions, F-69621, Villeurbanne, France.
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Abstract
Psyllids, whiteflies, aphids, and mealybugs are members of the suborder Sternorrhyncha and share a common property, namely the utilization of plant sap as their food source. Each of these insect groups has an obligatory association with a different prokaryotic endosymbiont, and the association is the result of a single infection followed by maternal, vertical transmission of the endosymbionts. The result of this association is the domestication of the free-living bacterium to serve the purposes of the host, namely the synthesis of essential amino acids. This domestication is probably in all cases accompanied by a major reduction in genome size. The different properties of the genomes and fragments of the genomes of these endosymbionts suggest that there are different constraints on the permissible evolutionary changes that are probably a function of the gene repertoire of the endosymbiont ancestor and the gene losses that occurred during the reduction of genome size.
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Affiliation(s)
- Paul Baumann
- Microbiology Section, University of California, Davis, California 95616,USA.
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Heddi A, Vallier A, Anselme C, Xin H, Rahbe Y, Wäckers F. Molecular and cellular profiles of insect bacteriocytes: mutualism and harm at the initial evolutionary step of symbiogenesis. Cell Microbiol 2004; 7:293-305. [PMID: 15659072 DOI: 10.1111/j.1462-5822.2004.00461.x] [Citation(s) in RCA: 47] [Impact Index Per Article: 2.4] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/30/2022]
Abstract
Intracellular symbiosis is considered to be a driving force in eukaryotic cell evolution. In insects, little is known about the molecular bases of the bacteria-bearing host cells (bacteriocytes), particularly in the initial steps of symbiosis, where the bacterial genome has not experienced severe gene deletions because of evolutionary constraints associated with intracellular and vertical transmission. Here, we have applied polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-subtracted cDNA and reverse Northern analysis on the bacteriocytes of a recently established endosymbiosis, the weevil Sitophilus zeamais, to discover genes of potential relevance to bacteriocyte genetics. We provide a broad characterization of bacteriocyte transcriptional responses to intracellular bacteria, including pathways covering metabolism-transport-stress (MTS), cell signalling and trafficking, growth and apoptosis, as well as innate immunity. MTS genes show an intriguing diabetes-like pathogenic profile associated with increased stress, as indicated by high levels of upregulations of carbohydrate transporters, aldose reductases and stress-related genes. A high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) analysis of tissue carbohydrate contents highlighted an increased carbohydrate assimilation in symbiotic insects and the prevalence of a polyol biosynthetic pathway, as indicated by the accumulation of sorbitol, mannitol and fructose in the bacteriocytes. These findings provide the first genetic perspectives on the nature of the interaction between insect and cooperative bacteria. They unravel the profound insect bacteriocyte stress associated with increased metabolism and cell trafficking, and they shed light on the potential role of the innate immunity during the pathogeny-mutualism transition at the initial stage of insect symbiogenesis.
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Affiliation(s)
- Abdelaziz Heddi
- Laboratoire de Biologie Fonctionnelle Insectes et Interactions, UMR INRA/INSA de Lyon, Bât. Louis Pasteur, 20 Avenue Albert Einstein, 69621 Villeurbanne Cedex, France.
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Rio RVM, Lefevre C, Heddi A, Aksoy S. Comparative genomics of insect-symbiotic bacteria: influence of host environment on microbial genome composition. Appl Environ Microbiol 2004; 69:6825-32. [PMID: 14602646 PMCID: PMC262273 DOI: 10.1128/aem.69.11.6825-6832.2003] [Citation(s) in RCA: 49] [Impact Index Per Article: 2.5] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/20/2022] Open
Abstract
Commensal symbionts, thought to be intermediary amid obligate mutualists and facultative parasites, offer insight into forces driving the evolutionary transition into mutualism. Using macroarrays developed for a close relative, Escherichia coli, we utilized a heterologous array hybridization approach to infer the genomic compositions of a clade of bacteria that have recently established symbiotic associations: Sodalis glossinidius with the tsetse fly (Diptera, Glossina spp.) and Sitophilus oryzae primary endosymbiont (SOPE) with the rice weevil (Coleoptera, Sitophilus oryzae). Functional biologies within their hosts currently reflect different forms of symbiotic associations. Their hosts, members of distant insect taxa, occupy distinct ecological niches and have evolved to survive on restricted diets of blood for tsetse and cereal for the rice weevil. Comparison of genome contents between the two microbes indicates statistically significant differences in the retention of genes involved in carbon compound catabolism, energy metabolism, fatty acid metabolism, and transport. The greatest reductions have occurred in carbon catabolism, membrane proteins, and cell structure-related genes for Sodalis and in genes involved in cellular processes (i.e., adaptations towards cellular conditions) for SOPE. Modifications in metabolic pathways, in the form of functional losses complementing particularities in host physiology and ecology, may have occurred upon initial entry from a free-living to a symbiotic state. It is possible that these adaptations, streamlining genomes, act to make a free-living state no longer feasible for the harnessed microbe.
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Affiliation(s)
- Rita V M Rio
- Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut 06510, USA
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Lefèvre C, Charles H, Vallier A, Delobel B, Farrell B, Heddi A. Endosymbiont phylogenesis in the dryophthoridae weevils: evidence for bacterial replacement. Mol Biol Evol 2004; 21:965-73. [PMID: 14739242 DOI: 10.1093/molbev/msh063] [Citation(s) in RCA: 150] [Impact Index Per Article: 7.5] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/14/2022] Open
Abstract
Intracellular symbiosis is widespread in the insect world where it plays an important role in evolution and adaptation. The weevil family Dryophthoridae (Curculionoidea) is of particular interest in intracellular symbiosis evolution with regard to the great economical and ecological features of these invasive insects, and the potential for comparative studies across a wide range of host plants and environments. Here, we have analyzed the intracellular symbiotic bacteria of 19 Dryophthoridae species collected worldwide, representing a wide range of plant species and tissues. All except one (Sitophilus linearis) harbor symbiotic bacteria within specialized cells (the bacteriocytes) assembled as an organ, the bacteriome. Phylogenetic analysis of the 16S rDNA gene sequence of the Dryophthoridae endosymbionts revealed three endosymbiotic clades belonging to gamma3-Proteobacteria and characterized by different GC contents and evolutionary rate. The genus name Candidatus Nardonella was proposed for the ancestral clade infesting Dryophthoridae 100 MYA and represented by five of nine bacterial genera studied. For this clade showing low GC content (40.5% GC) and high evolutionary rate (0.128 substitutions/site per 100 Myr), a single infection and subsequent cospeciation of the host and the endosymbionts was observed. In the two other insect lineage endosymbionts, with relatively high GC content (53.4% and 53.8% GC), competition with ancestral pathogenic bacteria might have occurred, leading to endosymbiont replacement in present-day last insects.
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Affiliation(s)
- Cédric Lefèvre
- Laboratoire de Biologie Fonctionnelle Insectes et Interactions, UMR INRA/INSA de Lyon, Villeurbanne, France
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