Evolutionary changes in symbiont community structure in ticks

Archive ouverte

Duron, Olivier | Binetruy, Florian | Noël, Valérie | Cremaschi, Julie | Mccoy, Karen | Arnathau, Céline | Plantard, Olivier | Goolsby, John | Pérez de León, Adalberto | Heylen, Dieter | van Oosten, Arend Raoul | Gottlieb, Yuval | Baneth, Gad | Guglielmone, Alberto | Estrada-Peña, Agustin | Opara, Maxwell | Zenner, Lionel | Vavre, Fabrice | Chevillon, Christine

Edité par CCSD ; Wiley -

International audience. Ecological specialization to restricted diet niches is driven by obligate, and often maternally inherited, symbionts in many arthropod lineages. These heritable symbionts typically form evolutionarily stable associations with arthropods that can last for millions of years. Ticks were recently found to harbour such an obligate symbiont, Coxiella-LE, that synthesizes B vitamins and cofactors not obtained in sufficient quantities from blood diet. In this study, the examination of 81 tick species shows that some Coxiella-LE symbioses are evolutionarily stable with an ancient acquisition followed by codiversification as observed in ticks belonging to the Rhipicephalus genus. However, many other Coxiella-LE symbioses are characterized by low evolutionary stability with frequent host shifts and extinction events. Further examination revealed the presence of nine other genera of maternally inherited bacteria in ticks. Although these nine symbionts were primarily thought to be facultative, their distribution among tick species rather suggests that at least four may have independently replaced Coxiella-LE and likely represent alternative obligate symbionts. Phylogenetic evidence otherwise indicates that cocladogenesis is globally rare in these symbioses as most originate via horizontal transfer of an existing symbiont between unrelated tick species. As a result, the structure of these symbiont communities is not fixed and stable across the tick phylogeny. Most importantly, the symbiont communities commonly reach high levels of diversity with up to six unrelated maternally inherited bacteria coexisting within host species. We further conjecture that interactions among coexisting symbionts are pivotal drivers of community structure both among and within tick species.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

The Recent Evolution of a Maternally-Inherited Endosymbiont of Ticks Led to the Emergence of the Q Fever Pathogen, Coxiella burnetii

Archive ouverte | Duron, Olivier | CCSD

International audience. Q fever is a highly infectious disease with a worldwide distribution. Its causative agent, the intracellular bacterium Coxiella burnetii, infects a variety of vertebrate species, including hu...

Genomic changes during the evolution of the Coxiella genus along the parasitism-mutualism continuum

Archive ouverte | Santos-Garcia, Diego | CCSD

RAW reads generated for this work and Coxiella-LE CLEOmar (GCA_907164965) and CLEDm (GCA_907164955) genome assemblies are available European Nucleotide Archive (ENA) under the BioProject number PRJEB44453. Coxiella-LE CLEOmar and ...

The evolution of intramitochondriality in Midichloria bacteria

Archive ouverte | Floriano, Anna Maria | CCSD

International audience. Midichloria spp. are intracellular bacterial symbionts of ticks. Representatives of this genus colonise mitochondria in the cells of their hosts. To shed light on this unique interaction we e...

Chargement des enrichissements...