Francisca Zepeda-Paulo, Violeta Romero, Juan Luis Celis-Diez, Blas Lavandero
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A newly discovered bacterial symbiont in the aphid microbiome identified through 16S rRNA sequencing
Microbiome insect research has grown rapidly over the last years thanks to advances in next-generation sequencing. The bacterial microbiome inhabiting insects often involves mutualistic associations between the insect hosts and maternally transmitted symbiotic bacteria. Among insect groups, aphids are the most studied regarding insect symbiosis, but with a strong bias toward a few well studied species. Increased resistance to parasitic wasps, entomopathogenic fungi and tolerance to thermal stresses are the most common facultative endosymbiont-mediated effects in aphid biology. Here, we studied the microbiome of the woolly apple aphid Eriosoma lanigerum, a severe pest of apple orchards, which has been poorly studied concerning facultative symbionts. Our 16S rRNA gene Illumina sequencing-based taxonomic assignment, showed a high representation of reads assigned (99% similarity) to a recently recognized bacterial taxon, not previously described in aphids, identified as Symbiopectobacterium purcellii. This bacterial endosymbiont has been recognized as a new clade of Enterobacteriaceae, vertically transmitted and mutualistic in various invertebrate hosts, including one nematode species and four insect species from the order Hemiptera. This finding emphasizes the need to extend the study of symbionts from entire microbiomes of insect hosts, to understand the diversity of endosymbionts across host species and their role in insect ecology.
期刊介绍:
Since 1985, Symbiosis publishes original research that contributes to the understanding of symbiotic interactions in a wide range of associations at the molecular, cellular and organismic level. Reviews and short communications on well-known or new symbioses are welcomed as are book reviews and obituaries. This spectrum of papers aims to encourage and enhance interactions among researchers in this rapidly expanding field.
Topics of interest include nutritional interactions; mutual regulatory and morphogenetic effects; structural co-adaptations; interspecific recognition; specificity; ecological adaptations; evolutionary consequences of symbiosis; and methods used for symbiotic research.