New Research In
Physical Sciences
Social Sciences
Featured Portals
Articles by Topic
Biological Sciences
Featured Portals
Articles by Topic
- Agricultural Sciences
- Anthropology
- Applied Biological Sciences
- Biochemistry
- Biophysics and Computational Biology
- Cell Biology
- Developmental Biology
- Ecology
- Environmental Sciences
- Evolution
- Genetics
- Immunology and Inflammation
- Medical Sciences
- Microbiology
- Neuroscience
- Pharmacology
- Physiology
- Plant Biology
- Population Biology
- Psychological and Cognitive Sciences
- Sustainability Science
- Systems Biology
Wolbachia as a bacteriocyte-associated nutritional mutualist
Edited by Nancy A. Moran, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, and approved November 30, 2009 (received for review October 5, 2009)

Abstract
Many insects are dependent on bacterial symbionts that provide essential nutrients (ex. aphid–Buchnera and tsetse–Wiglesworthia associations), wherein the symbionts are harbored in specific cells called bacteriocytes that constitute a symbiotic organ bacteriome. Facultative and parasitic bacterial symbionts like Wolbachia have been regarded as evolutionarily distinct from such obligate nutritional mutualists. However, we discovered that, in the bedbug Cimex lectularius, Wolbachia resides in a bacteriome and appears to be an obligate nutritional mutualist. Two bacterial symbionts, a Wolbachia strain and an unnamed γ-proteobacterium, were identified from different strains of the bedbug. The Wolbachia symbiont was detected from all of the insects examined whereas the γ-proteobacterium was found in a part of them. The Wolbachia symbiont was specifically localized in the bacteriomes and vertically transmitted via the somatic stem cell niche of germalia to oocytes, infecting the incipient symbiotic organ at an early stage of the embryogenesis. Elimination of the Wolbachia symbiont resulted in retarded growth and sterility of the host insect. These deficiencies were rescued by oral supplementation of B vitamins, confirming the essential nutritional role of the symbiont for the host. The estimated genome size of the Wolbachia symbiont was around 1.3 Mb, which was almost equivalent to the genome sizes of parasitic Wolbachia strains of other insects. These results indicate that bacteriocyte-associated nutritional mutualism can evolve from facultative and prevalent microbial associates like Wolbachia, highlighting a previously unknown aspect of the parasitism-mutualism evolutionary continuum.
Footnotes
- 1To whom correspondence may be addressed. E-mail: t-fukatsu{at}aist.go.jp.
Author contributions: T.H. and T.F. designed research; T.H., R.K., Y.K., and X.-Y.M. performed research; T.H. analyzed data; and T.H. and T.F. wrote the paper.
The authors declare no conflict of interest.
Data deposition: The sequences reported in this paper have been deposited in the DNA Data Base in Japan database (accession nos. AB475122-AB475126, AB475132-AB475142, AB508951, and AB508953).
This article is a PNAS Direct Submission.
This article contains supporting information online at www.pnas.org/cgi/content/full/0911476107/DCSupplemental.
Citation Manager Formats
Sign up for Article Alerts
Jump to section
You May Also be Interested in
More Articles of This Classification
Biological Sciences
Evolution
Related Content
- No related articles found.
Cited by...
- Polar cell fate stimulates Wolbachia intracellular growth
- Incidence of Facultative Bacterial Endosymbionts in Spider Mites Associated with Local Environments and Host Plants
- Bacteriocyte cell death in the pea aphid/Buchnera symbiotic system
- Wolbachia, bottled water, and the dark side of symbiosis
- Cytonuclear Epistasis Controls the Density of Symbiont Wolbachia pipientis in Nongonadal Tissues of Mosquito Culex quinquefasciatus
- Dietary saccharides and sweet tastants have differential effects on colonization of Drosophila oocytes by Wolbachia endosymbionts
- Comparative Genomics of a Parthenogenesis-Inducing Wolbachia Symbiont
- Genomes of Candidatus Wolbachia bourtzisii wDacA and Candidatus Wolbachia pipientis wDacB from the Cochineal Insect Dactylopius coccus (Hemiptera: Dactylopiidae)
- Nutrition mediates the expression of cultivar-farmer conflict in a fungus-growing ant
- The Bacteriome of Bat Flies (Nycteribiidae) from the Malagasy Region: a Community Shaped by Host Ecology, Bacterial Transmission Mode, and Host-Vector Specificity
- Riboflavin Provisioning Underlies Wolbachia's Fitness Contribution to Its Insect Host
- Arsenophonus and Sodalis Symbionts in Louse Flies: an Analogy to the Wigglesworthia and Sodalis System in Tsetse Flies
- Insect's intestinal organ for symbiont sorting
- Acromyrmex Leaf-Cutting Ants Have Simple Gut Microbiota with Nitrogen-Fixing Potential
- "Wigglesworthia morsitans" Folate (Vitamin B9) Biosynthesis Contributes to Tsetse Host Fitness
- Ultrabithorax is essential for bacteriocyte development
- Wolbachia Influences the Production of Octopamine and Affects Drosophila Male Aggression
- Vitamin B6 Generated by Obligate Symbionts Is Critical for Maintaining Proline Homeostasis and Fecundity in Tsetse Flies
- Evolutionary origin of insect-Wolbachia nutritional mutualism
- Bacteriophage adhering to mucus provide a non-host-derived immunity
- Evolutionarily conserved Wolbachia-encoded factors control pattern of stem-cell niche tropism in Drosophila ovaries and favor infection
- Evolution, Multiple Acquisition, and Localization of Endosymbionts in Bat Flies (Diptera: Hippoboscoidea: Streblidae and Nycteribiidae)
- Some Like It Hot: Evolution and Ecology of Novel Endosymbionts in Bat Flies of Cave-Roosting Bats (Hippoboscoidea, Nycterophiliinae)
- Analysis of gene expression from the Wolbachia genome of a filarial nematode supports both metabolic and defensive roles within the symbiosis
- Novel Clade of Alphaproteobacterial Endosymbionts Associated with Stinkbugs and Other Arthropods
- Diversity of Symbiotic Organs and Bacterial Endosymbionts of Lygaeoid Bugs of the Families Blissidae and Lygaeidae (Hemiptera: Heteroptera: Lygaeoidea)
- Obligate Symbionts Activate Immune System Development in the Tsetse Fly
- Wolbachia Enhance Drosophila Stem Cell Proliferation and Target the Germline Stem Cell Niche
- Rapid Fluorescence-Based Screening for Wolbachia Endosymbionts in Drosophila Germ Line and Somatic Tissues
- Specific Developmental Window for Establishment of an Insect-Microbe Gut Symbiosis
- Wolbachia and the biological control of mosquito-borne disease
- Characterization of an Obligate Intracellular Bacterium in the Midgut Epithelium of the Bulrush Bug Chilacis typhae (Heteroptera, Lygaeidae, Artheneinae)
- Decoupling of Host-Symbiont-Phage Coadaptations Following Transfer Between Insect Species
- The Effective Size of Populations Infected With Cytoplasmic Sex-Ratio Distorters