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1.
Living organisms constantly interact with their habitats, selectively taking up compounds from their surroundings to meet their particular needs but also excreting metabolic products and thus modifying their environment. The small size, ubiquity, metabolic versatility, flexibility, and genetic plasticity (horizontal transfer) of microbes allow them to tolerate and quickly adapt to unfavorable and/or changing environmental conditions. The consumption of resources and the formation of metabolic products by spatially separated microbial populations constitute the driving forces that lead to chemical gradient formation. Communication and cooperation, both within and among bacterial species, have produced the properties that give these organisms a selective advantage. Observations of a wide range of natural habitats have established that bacteria do not function as individuals; rather, the vast majority of bacteria in natural and pathogenic ecosystems live in biofilms, defined as surface-associated, complex aggregates of bacterial communities that are attached to solid substrates and embedded in a polymer matrix of their own production. The spatial configurations of biofilms reach levels of complexity nearing those of multicellular eukaryotes. Microbial consortia have played important roles throughout the history of life on Earth, from the microbial mats (a type of biofilm) that were probably the first ecosystems in the early Archean, to the complex microbiota of the intestinal tract of different animals.  相似文献   

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While much work has been done on the conditions surrounding the emergence and establishment of industrial symbiosis (IS), new attention is being paid to understanding the evolution of IS over time. We demonstrate empirically how a new, facilitated IS initiative developed and evolved over an 8‐year period. We explore its network evolution by considering how the facilitator's actions enabled and precluded two fundamental network processes—serendipitous and goal‐directed processes. We discuss implications for a more generalized theory of IS development by exploring why and how different evolutionary trajectories may unfold.  相似文献   

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Many organisms harbor microbial associates that have profound impacts on host traits. The phenotypic effect of symbionts on their hosts may include changes in development, reproduction, longevity, and defense against natural enemies. Determining the consequences of associating with a microbial symbiont requires experimental comparison of hosts with and without symbionts. Then, determining the mechanism by which symbionts alter these phenotypes can involve genomic, genetic, and evolutionary approaches; however, many host-associated symbionts are not amenable to genetic approaches that require cultivation of the microbe outside the host. In the current issue of PLOS Biology, Chrostek and Teixeira highlight an elegant approach to studying functional mechanisms of symbiont-conferred traits. They used directed experimental evolution to select for strains of Wolbachia wMelPop (a bacterial symbiont of fruit flies) that differed in copy number of a region of the genome suspected to underlie virulence. Copy number evolved rapidly when under selection, and wMelPop strains with more copies of the region shortened the lives of their Drosophila hosts more than symbionts with fewer copies. Interestingly, the wMelPop strains with more copies also increase host resistance to viruses compared to symbionts with fewer copies. Their study highlights the power of exploiting alternative approaches when elucidating the functional impacts of symbiotic associations.Symbioses, long-term and physically close interactions between two or more species, are central to the ecology and evolution of many organisms. Though “Symbiosis” is more often used to define interactions that are presumed to be mutually beneficial to a host and its microbial partner, a broader definition including both parasitic and mutualistic interactions recognizes that the fitness effects of many symbioses are complex and often context dependent. Whether an association is beneficial can depend on ecological conditions, and mutation and other evolutionary processes can result in symbiont strains that differ in terms of costs and benefits to hosts (Fig. 1).Open in a separate windowFig 1The symbiosis spectrum.The costs and benefits of symbiosis for hosts are not bimodal but span a continuum. The benefit to cost ratio is mediated both by environmental conditions and by the strain of symbiont. For example, the bacteria Hamiltonella defensa increases aphid resistance to parasitoid wasps. When Hamiltonella loses an associated bacteriophage, protection is lost. Also, in aphids, Buchnera aphidicola is a bacterial symbiont that provisions its hosts with critical nutritional resources. However, alterations of the heat shock promoter in Buchnera lessen the fitness benefit of symbiosis for the hosts under elevated temperatures. Amplification of a region of the Wolbachia genome known as Octomom causes the bacteria to shorten the lifespan of its Drosophila fly hosts.Elucidating the effects of host-associated microbes includes, when possible, experiments designed to assay host phenotypes when they do and do not have a particular symbiont of interest (Fig. 2). In systems in which hosts acquire symbionts from the environment, hosts can be reared in sterile conditions to prevent acquisition [1]. If symbionts are passed internally from mother to offspring, antibiotic treatments can sometimes be utilized to obtain lineages of hosts without symbionts [2]. The impacts of symbiont presence on survival, development, reproduction, and defense can be quantified, with the caveat that these impacts may be quite different under alternative environmental conditions. While such experiments are sometimes more tractable in systems with simple microbial consortia, the same experimental processes can be utilized in systems with more complex microbial communities [3,4].Open in a separate windowFig 2Approaches to functionally characterize symbiont effects.The first step in functionally characterizing the phenotypic impacts of a symbiont on its host is to measure phenotypes of hosts with and without symbionts. Any effects need to be considered in the light of how they are modified by environmental conditions. Understanding the mechanisms underlying symbiont alteration of host phenotype can involve, and often combines, genomic, genetic, and evolutionary approaches. Solid arrows indicate the path leading to results highlighted in Chrostek and Teixeira’s investigation of Wolbachia virulence in this issue of PLoS Biology.Once a fitness effect of symbiosis is ascertained, determining the mechanistic basis of this effect can be challenging. A genomics approach sometimes provides informative insight into microbial function. Sequencing of many insect-associated symbionts, for example, has confirmed the presence of genes necessary for amino acid and vitamin synthesis [58]. These genomic revelations, in some cases, can be linked to phenotypic effects of symbiosis for the hosts. For example, aphids reared in the absence of their obligate symbiotic bacteria, Buchnera aphidicola, can survive when provisioned with supplemental amino acids but cannot survive without supplementation, suggesting that Buchnera’s provisioning of amino acids is critical for host survival [9,10]. The Buchnera genome contains many of the genes necessary for amino acid synthesis [5].Linking genotype to phenotype, however, can be complicated. Experiments are necessary to functionally test the insights garnered from genome sequencing. For example, just because a symbiont has genes necessary for synthesis of a particular nutrient does not mean that the nutrient is being provisioned to its host. Furthermore, in many systems we do not know what genetic mechanisms are most likely to influence a symbiont-conferred phenotype. For example, if hosts associated with a given microbe have lower fitness than those without the microbe, what mechanism mediates this phenotype? Is it producing a toxin? Is it using too many host resources? In these cases, a single genome provides even less insight.Comparative genomics can be another approach. This requires collection of hosts with alternative symbiont strains and then testing these strains in a common host background to demonstrate that they have different phenotypic effects. Symbiont genomes can then be sequenced and compared to identify differences. This approach was utilized to compare genomes of strains of the aphid bacterial symbiont Regiella insecticola that confer different levels of resistance to parasitoid wasps [11]; the protective and nonprotective Regiella genome differed in many respects. Comparing the genomes of Wolbachia strains with differential impacts on fly host fitness [12,13] revealed fewer differences, though none involved a gene with a function known to impact host fitness. Comparative genomics rarely uncovers a holy grail as the genomes of symbiont strains with alternative phenotypic effects rarely differ at a single locus of known function.Another approach, which is at the heart of studies of microbial pathogens, is to use genetic tools to manipulate symbionts at candidate loci (or randomly through mutagenesis) and compare the phenotypic effects of genetically-manipulated and unmanipulated symbionts. Indeed, this approach has provided insights into genes underlying traits of both pathogenic [14] and beneficial [15,16] microbes. There is one challenge. Many host-associated symbionts are not cultivable outside of their hosts, which precludes utilization of most traditional genetic techniques used to modify microbial genomes.An alternative approach to studying symbiont function leverages evolution. Occasionally, lineages that once conferred some phenotypic effect, when tested later, no longer do. If symbiont samples were saved along the way, researchers can then determine what in the genome changed. For example, pea aphids (Acyrthosiphon pisum) harboring the bacteria Hamiltonella defensa are more resistant to parasitoid wasps than those without the bacteria [17,18]. Toxin-encoding genes identified in the genome of a Hamiltonella-associated bacteriophage were hypothesized to be central to this defense [18,19]. However, confirmation of the bacteriophage’s role required comparing the insects’ resistance to wasps when they harbored the same Hamiltonella with and without the phage. No Hamiltonella isolates were found in nature without the phage, but bottleneck passaging of the insects and symbionts generation after generation in the laboratory led to the loss of phage in multiple host lineages. Experimental assays confirmed that in the absence of phage, there was no protection [20]. Similarly, laboratory passaging of aphids and symbionts serendipitously led to spread of a mutation in the genome of Buchnera aphidicola, the primary, amino acid-synthesizing symbiont of pea aphids. The mutation, a single nucleotide deletion in the promoter for ibpA, a gene encoding for a heat-shock protein, lowers aphid fitness under elevated temperature conditions [21]. The mutation is found at low levels in natural aphid populations, suggesting that laboratory conditions facilitate maintenance of the genotype.In the above cases, evolution was a fortunate coincidence. In this issue of PLoS Biology, Chrostek and Teixeira (2014) illustrate another alternative, directed experimental evolution. Previous work demonstrated that a strain of the symbiotic bacterium Wolbachia, wMelPop, is virulent to its Drosophila melanogaster hosts, considerably shortening lifespan while overproliferating inside the flies [22]. To investigate the mechanism of virulence, researchers compared the genomic content of an avirulent Wolbachia strain to that of the virulent wMelPop [12,13]. These comparisons revealed that the wMelPop genome contains a region with eight genes that is amplified multiple times; in avirulent strains there is only a single copy. This eight gene region was nicknamed “Octomom.” To functionally test whether Octomom mediates Wolbachia virulence, over successive generations, Chrostek and Teixeira selected for females with either high or low Octomom copy numbers to start the next generations. They found that copy number could evolve rapidly and was correlated with virulence. Flies harboring wMelPop with more copies of Octomom had shorter lifespans. This cost was reversed in the presence of natural enemies; flies harboring wMelPop with more copies of Octomom had higher resistance to viral pathogens. Thus, selection provided a functional link between genotype and phenotype in a symbiont recalcitrant to traditional microbial genetics approaches.In many respects, this is similar to the research on aphids and their symbionts, where protective phenotypes were lost through passaging of aphids and symbionts generation after generation, as part of standard laboratory maintenance. Chrostek and Teixeira simply used the tools of experimental evolution to select for altered symbionts in a controlled fashion. Comparison of the studies also highlights two potential approaches—select for a phenotype and determine the genotypic change, or select for a genotype of interest and determine the phenotypic effect.Why do we need to know the genetic mechanisms underlying symbiont-conferred traits? In terms of evolutionary dynamics, the maintenance of a symbiont’s effect in a population is predicated on the likelihood of it being maintained in the presence of mutation, drift, and selection. Symbiosis research often considers how ecological conditions influence symbiont-conferred traits but less often considers the instability of those influences due to evolutionary change. From the perspective of applied applications to human concerns, symbiont alteration of insect phenotypes are potential mechanisms to reduce vectoring of human and agricultural pathogens, either through directly reducing insect fitness or reducing the capacity of vectors to serve as pathogen reservoirs [2328]. Short term field trials, for example, have demonstrated spread and persistence of Wolbachia in mosquito populations [29,30]. Because Wolbachia reduce persistence of viruses, including human pathogens, in insects [26,3133], this is a promising pesticide-free and drug-free control strategy for insect-vectored diseases. Can we assume that Wolbachia and other symbionts will always confer the same phenotypes to their hosts? If the conferred phenotype is based on a region of the genome where mutation is likely (e.g., the homopolymeric track within the heat shock promoter of aphid Buchnera, the Octomom region in Drosophila wMelPop), then we have clear reason to suspect that the genotypic and phenotypic makeup of the symbiont population could change over time. We need to investigate how populations of bacterial symbionts evolve in host populations under natural ecological conditions, carefully screening for both changes in phenotype and changes in genotype over the course of such experimental observations. We then need to incorporate evolutionary changes when modeling symbiont maintenance and when considering the use of symbionts in applied applications.  相似文献   

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Background

Deep-sea mussels harboring chemoautotrophic symbionts from hydrothermal vents and seeps are assumed to have evolved from shallow-water asymbiotic relatives by way of biogenic reducing environments such as sunken wood and whale falls. Such symbiotic associations have been well characterized in mussels collected from vents, seeps and sunken wood but in only a few from whale falls.

Methodology/Principal Finding

Here we report symbioses in the gill tissues of two mussels, Adipicola crypta and Adipicola pacifica, collected from whale-falls on the continental shelf in the northwestern Pacific. The molecular, morphological and stable isotopic characteristics of bacterial symbionts were analyzed. A single phylotype of thioautotrophic bacteria was found in A. crypta gill tissue and two distinct phylotypes of bacteria (referred to as Symbiont A and Symbiont C) in A. pacifica. Symbiont A and the A. crypta symbiont were affiliated with thioautotrophic symbionts of bathymodiolin mussels from deep-sea reducing environments, while Symbiont C was closely related to free-living heterotrophic bacteria. The symbionts in A. crypta were intracellular within epithelial cells of the apical region of the gills and were extracellular in A. pacifica. No spatial partitioning was observed between the two phylotypes in A. pacifica in fluorescence in situ hybridization experiments. Stable isotopic analyses of carbon and sulfur indicated the chemoautotrophic nature of A. crypta and mixotrophic nature of A. pacifica. Molecular phylogenetic analyses of the host mussels showed that A. crypta constituted a monophyletic clade with other intracellular symbiotic (endosymbiotic) mussels and that A. pacifica was the sister group of all endosymbiotic mussels.

Conclusions/Significance

These results strongly suggest that the symbiosis in A. pacifica is at an earlier stage in evolution than other endosymbiotic mussels. Whale falls and other modern biogenic reducing environments may act as refugia for primal chemoautotrophic symbioses between eukaryotes and prokaryotes since the extinction of ancient large marine vertebrates.  相似文献   

7.
This study analyzes the evolution of the research field of industrial symbiosis (IS). We elucidate its embedding in industrial ecology (IE), trace the development of research themes, and reveal the evolution of the research network through analysis of the core literature and journals that appeared from 1997 to 2012 by citation analysis, cocitation analysis, and network analysis. In the first period (1997–2005), IS research held a minority share in the IE literature. The research revolved around the concept of IS, the assessment of eco‐industrial park projects, and the establishment of waste treatment and recycling networks. In the second period (2006–2012), diverse research approaches and theories enriched the field, which has led to a maturation in theory building. Our findings clearly illustrate that IS evolved from practice‐oriented research toward coherent theory building through a systematic underpinning and linking of diverse topics. As scientific attention shifted from exploring a phenomenon to elucidating underlying mechanisms, IS knowledge found worldwide practical implementation. The coauthorship network shows that the academic communities of IS are distributed worldwide and that international collaboration is widespread. Through bibliometric and network analysis of IS, we have created a systemic, quantitative image of the evolution of the IS research field and community, which gives IS researchers an underpinned overview of the IS research and may help them to identify new directions and synergy in worldwide research.  相似文献   

8.
A number of genera of soil fungi interact with plant roots to establish symbiotic associations whereby phosphate acquired by the fungus is exchanged for fixed carbon from the plant. Recent progress in investigating these associations, designated as mycorrhizae (sing., mycorrhiza), has led to the identification of specific steps in the establishment of the symbiosis in which the fungus and the plant interact in response to various molecular signals. Some of these signals are conserved with those of the Rhizobium-legume nitrogen-fixing symbiosis, suggesting that the two plant-microbe interactions share a common signal transduction pathway. Nevertheless, only legume hosts nodulate in response to Rhizobium, whereas the vast majority of flowering plants establish mycorrhizal associations. The key questions for the future are: what are the signal molecules produced by mycorrhizal fungi and how are they perceived by the plant? Copyright 1998 Academic Press.  相似文献   

9.
Mutualistic symbioses are considered to evolve from parasitic relationships. Vertical transmission, defined as the direct transfer of infection from a parent organism to its progeny, has been suggested as a key factor causing reduction of symbiont virulence and evolution of mutualism. On the other hand, there are several mutualistic associations without vertical transmission, such as those between plants and mycorrhizal fungi, legumes and rhizobia, and some corals and dinoflagellates. It is expected that all mutualisms evolve perfect vertical transmission if the relationship is really mutualistic, because hosts may fail to acquire symbionts if they do not transmit the symbionts by vertical transmission. We have developed a mathematical model to clarify the conditions under which mutualistic symbiosis without vertical transmission should evolve. The evolution may occur when and only when (i) vertical transmission involves some costs in the host, (ii) the symbiont suffers direct negative effects if it exploits the host too intensively, (iii) the host establishes the ability to make use of waste products from the symbiont, and (iv) the mechanism of vertical transmission is controlled by the host. We also clarify the conditions under which mutualistic symbiosis with vertical transmission evolves.  相似文献   

10.
To many pathogenic bacteria, human hosts are an evolutionary dead end. This begs the question what evolutionary forces have shaped their virulence traits. Why are these bacteria so virulent? The coincidental evolution hypothesis suggests that such virulence factors result from adaptation to other ecological niches. In particular, virulence traits in bacteria might result from selective pressure exerted by protozoan predator. Thus, grazing resistance may be an evolutionarily exaptation for bacterial pathogenicity. This hypothesis was tested by subjecting a well characterized collection of 31 Escherichia coli strains (human commensal or extra-intestinal pathogenic) to grazing by the social haploid amoeba Dictyostelium discoideum. We then assessed how resistance to grazing correlates with some bacterial traits, such as the presence of virulence genes. Whatever the relative population size (bacteria/amoeba) for a non-pathogenic bacteria strain, D. discoideum was able to phagocytise, digest and grow. In contrast, a pathogenic bacterium strain killed D. discoideum above a certain bacteria/amoeba population size. A plating assay was then carried out using the E. coli collection faced to the grazing of D. discoideum. E. coli strains carrying virulence genes such as iroN, irp2, fyuA involved in iron uptake, belonging to the B2 phylogenetic group and being virulent in a mouse model of septicaemia were resistant to the grazing from D. discoideum. Experimental proof of the key role of the irp gene in the grazing resistance was evidenced with a mutant strain lacking this gene. Such determinant of virulence may well be originally selected and (or) further maintained for their role in natural habitat: resistance to digestion by free-living protozoa, rather than for virulence per se.  相似文献   

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VA菌根共生的起源和进化   总被引:10,自引:2,他引:10  
VA菌根共生的起源和进化赵之伟(云南大学生物学系,昆明650091)OriginandEvolutionoftheVAMycorrhizalSymbiosis.ZhaoZhiwei(BiologyDepartmentofYunnanUniversit...  相似文献   

15.
Toxinogenic endobacteria were isolated from a collection of Rhizopus spp. representing highly diverse geographic origins and ecological niches. All endosymbionts belonged to the Burkholderia rhizoxinica complex according to matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-time of flight biotyping and multilocus sequence typing, suggesting a common ancestor. Comparison of host and symbiont phylogenies provides insights into possible cospeciation and horizontal-transmission events.Bacterial symbionts and their metabolic potential play essential roles for many organisms. They may benefit from improved fitness, survival, and even acquired virulence (7, 12, 22). In the course of our studies of the biosynthesis of rhizoxin, the causative agent of rice seedling blight (10), we found that the phytotoxin is produced not by the fungus Rhizopus microsporus but by symbiotic bacteria (Burkholderia rhizoxinica) that reside within the fungus cytosol (13, 15, 23). Furthermore, cloning and sequencing of the rhizoxin biosynthesis gene cluster revealed the molecular basis of bacterial toxin production (14). In sum, this represents an unparalleled example for a symbiosis in which a fungus harbors bacteria for the production of a virulence factor. In analogy, we found that the first reported “mycotoxins” from lower fungi, the highly toxic cyclopeptides rhizonin A and B (25, 28), are also produced by symbiotic bacteria (Burkholderia endofungorum) and not by the fungus (16). While both rhizoxins and rhizonins have been believed to promote zygomycoses (21), there is no indication for toxin-producing endosymbiotic bacteria in clinical isolates (18).In nature, toxin production plays a pivotal role in the development of the fungus-bacterium association. Studies of the evolution of host resistance indicate that the association resulted from a pathogenicity mutualism shift in insensitive zygomycetes (24). The fungus lost its ability to sporulate independently and became totally dependent on endobacteria for reproduction through spores, thus warranting the persistence of the symbiosis and its efficient distribution through vegetative spores (17).To gain a broader view of the occurrence, biosynthetic potential, and relationship of toxinogenic endofungal bacteria, we investigated a collection of Rhizopus spp. consisting of 20 isolates classified as R. microsporus (of which 13 belong to R. microsporus var. microsporus, four to R. microsporus var. chinensis, two to R. microsporus var. oligosporus, and one to R. microsporus var. rhizopodiformis), one isolate classified as Rhizopus sp., and one Rhizopus oryzae strain. We initially monitored the presence of bacterial symbionts by PCR using universal primers (16S rRNA genes) and rhizoxin production in all available Rhizopus strains. Liquid cultivation of fungi in production medium with and without antibiotic followed by organic solvent extraction yielded crude extracts that were analyzed by high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) and mass spectrometry (MS). In total, eight fungal strains were identified or confirmed as rhizoxin positive and thus expected to harbor endosymbionts. In all cases, this assumption was verified by PCR and confocal scanning microscopy. By means of an optimized protocol, we finally succeeded in the isolation and cultivation of all eight bacterial symbiont strains in pure cultures (isolates B1 to B8) (Table (Table11).

TABLE 1.

Fungal strains and their bacterial endosymbionts
TaxonStrain designationaOriginBacterial endosymbiont (isolate)
Rhizopus microsporus van TieghemATCC 62417Rice seedlings, JapanBurkholderia rhizoxinica HKI-0454 (B1)
Rhizopus sp. strain F-1360ATCC 20577Soil, JapanBurkholderia sp. strain HKI-0512 (B2)
Rhizopus microsporus Tieghem var. microsporusCBS 111563Sufu starter culture, rice wine tablet, VietnamBurkholderia sp. strain HKI-0455 (B3)
Rhizopus microsporus Tieghem var. microsporusCBS 699.68Soil, UkraineBurkholderia sp. strain HKI-402 (B4)
Rhizopus microsporus TieghemCBS 112285Ground nuts, MozambiqueBurkholderia endofungorum HKI-0456 (B5)
Rhizopus microsporus var. chinensis (Saito) Schipper & StalpersCBS 261.28Not specified, United States of AmericaBurkholderia sp. strain HKI-0513 (B6)
Rhizopus microsporus Tieghem var. microsporusCBS 700.68Forest soil, GeorgiaBurkholderia sp. strain HKI-0403 (B7)
Rhizopus microsporus Tieghem var. microsporusCBS 308.87Man, from deep necrotic tissue within the hand following a spider bite, AustraliaBurkholderia sp. strain HKI-0404 (B8)
Open in a separate windowaATCC, American Type Culture Collection, Manassas, VA; CBS, Centraalbureau voor Schimmelcultures, Utrecht, The Netherlands.Notably, the eight Rhizopus isolates are from geographically distinct collection sites, covering all five continents (Africa, America, Asia, Australia, and Europe) and representing diverse ecological niches of the host (plants, soil, food, and necrotic tissue) (Fig. (Fig.1;1; Table Table1).1). HPLC and MS analyses of the metabolic profiles and comparison with authentic references revealed that all endofungal bacterial strains are capable of producing considerable amounts of rhizoxin derivatives 1 to 7 (23) (Fig. (Fig.2).2). Among the rhizoxin derivatives, rhizoxin S2 (derivative 3) is the main product formed by all isolates, followed by compounds WF-1360F (derivative 6) (11), rhizoxin Z1 (derivative 4), and rhizoxin S1 (derivative 1) (23), while derivatives 2, 5, and 7 are formed only in minor amounts. Significant differences in production of rhizoxins were not found among the isolates (see Fig. S1 in the supplemental material). Only one isolate, Burkholderia endofungorum HKI-0456 (isolate B5), also produces the hepatotoxic cyclopeptides rhizonin A (derivative 8) and B (derivative 9) under laboratory conditions (16).Open in a separate windowFIG. 1.Survey of collection sites of toxinogenic R. microsporus strains used in this study.Open in a separate windowFIG. 2.Structures of the main rhizoxin derivatives (derivatives 1 to 7) produced by all eight fungal endosymbionts (isolates B1 to B8) and structures of rhizonin A and B (derivatives 8 and 9), produced by the symbiont B. endofungorum HKI-0456 (isolate B5).A preceding phylogenetic analysis of the 16S rRNA gene of the type strains B. rhizoxinica HKI-0454 (B1) and B. endofungorum HKI-0456 (B5) showed that both isolates belong to the genus Burkholderia (13). Although the two strains resemble each other in terms of endofungal lifestyle and physiology, DNA-DNA hybridization experiments enforced the division of the two isolates into two distinct species. To establish the taxonomic positions of all eight bacterial symbionts, we isolated genomic DNA from the recovered strains and obtained full-length 16S rRNA gene sequences by PCR using 16S universal primers (15). Sequence comparisons revealed that all isolated endosymbiotic bacteria are closely related to species of the genus Burkholderia.However, the close relationship of the symbionts is particularly intriguing considering the highly diverse collection localities of the host strains (Table (Table1).1). Despite the clear grouping of the bacteria associated with Rhizopus, the phylogenetic relationship within the endofungal symbiont complex could not be resolved by 16S rRNA gene data alone (see Fig. S2 in the supplemental material). Several computational methods failed to infer a statistically meaningful phylogeny. To overcome uncertainties in the 16S rRNA gene and biotyping analyses and to further characterize the genotypes of the eight isolates of the B. rhizoxinica complex, we performed a multilocus sequence typing (MLST) analysis. Seven conserved gene loci from all isolates were amplified by PCR, sequenced, and phylogenetically analyzed. To facilitate the comparison with an MLST study of the related bacterium Burkholderia pseudomallei (8), fragments of the following genes were chosen: ace (acetoacetyl-coenzyme A reductase), gltB (glutamate synthase, large subunit), gmhD (ADP-l-glycero-d-manno-heptose-6-epimerase), lepA (GTP-binding protein), lipA (lipoate synthase), and ndh (NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase). Shotgun sequencing of the genomes of two symbiont isolates indicated that the narK locus used in the B. pseudomallei study is obviously not present in the endofungal Burkholderia strains (G. Lackner, L. P. Partida-Martinez, and C. Hertweck, unpublished results). Therefore, as a characteristic feature of the ecotype, a locus from the rhizoxin biosynthesis gene cluster, rhiE (14), was sequenced in all isolates. The rhiE locus codes for a part of the polyketide synthase involved in rhizoxin biosynthesis in endofungal bacteria (14). It should be mentioned that a homologous rhizoxin biosynthesis gene cluster has been identified in the phylogenetically distant strain Pseudomonas fluorescens Pf-5 (3, 19).All loci were analyzed independently to test for incongruence between the data sets. The majority of the single-locus trees yielded a topology similar to that shown in Fig. S3 in the supplemental material. Only the ace locus resulted in a different tree: it showed a split (Eurasian, B8) (B5, others) different from the split (Eurasian, B5) (B8, others) found in the majority of single-locus trees (gltB, gmhD, and lipA) (see Fig. S3 in the supplemental material). The remaining loci (lepA, ndh, and rhiE) failed to infer statistically supported clades containing the strain B5 or B8. The phi test for recombination implemented in the program SplitsTree4 (5, 9a) indicated evidence for recombination, if the ace locus was included in the data set (P = 0.044). The removal of the ace locus abolished the signal. We conducted concatenated analyses including gltB, gmhD, lipA, lepA, ndh, and rhiE in the presence and absence of the ace locus. The resulting phylogenetic trees were recovered using distance matrix, maximum-parsimony, and Bayesian methods (see Fig. S3 and S4 in the supplemental material). We found that the tree topology is independent from the presence or absence of the ace locus. An alternative way to illustrate the phylogenetic groupings is in a network (9) (Fig. (Fig.3).3). The type strain B. rhizoxinica HKI-0454 (isolate B1) and isolate B6 share identical alleles in all sequenced loci and thus could be considered the same species. This high degree of similarity is supported by matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization protein profiling (see Fig. S5 in the supplemental material). However, it is remarkable that the geographic origins of isolates B1 and B6 (Japan and the United States, respectively) are different. Another member of this “Pacific group,” isolate B2 from Japan, is the closest relative. This observation strongly suggests that the Japanese and U.S. isolates have a common ancestor. Another highly supported clade, the “Eurasian group,” consists of the isolates B3 (Vietnam), B4 (Ukraine), and B7 (Georgia). Again, strain B3 and B7 are highly similar at the nucleotide level despite their geographic distance. Although related to this clade, the B. endofungorum type strain HKI-0456 (isolate B5), isolated from ground nuts in Mozambique, is unique in both genotypic and phenotypic aspects. Isolate B8 from Australia is related even more remotely to all other strains. The phylogenetic data obtained in this study suggest that all Burkholderia symbiont strains found in Rhizopus have a common ancestor.Open in a separate windowFIG. 3.Phylogenetic network of the endofungal symbiont complex (isolates B1 to B8) and B. pseudomallei (BPS), based on MLST. The graph was obtained by the neighbor-net method, implemented with the SplitsTree4 program. Uncertainties in the data are visualized by the network structure in the center.To test whether the phylogenetic data obtained from the MLST analysis contain further information about the evolution of the endofungal symbiosis, we analyzed the extent of detectable recombination in the data set. The presence of recombination could be explained by the exchange of genetic material between bacterial lineages that might have occurred during horizontal transmission of endosymbionts. Less likely, recombination could mean that the mutualistic association was established several times in some of the lineages.The number of incompatible splits in the center of the phylogenetic-network structure (Fig. (Fig.3)3) leaves some uncertainty about the correct placement of the strains B8 and B5, and the phi test for recombination indicated evidence for recombination if the ace locus was included. However, recombination does not appear to be a dominant factor in the evolution of the core genome of the known endosymbionts. Notably, the strong congruence between the trees retrieved from the symbiont data is in stark contrast to the recently reported high rate of recombination in free-living Burkholderia spp. (2, 6). Presumably, this is not due to a lack of recombination machinery, as homologous recombination works fine in at least three of the strains under laboratory conditions. Rather, we assume that the mainly vertically transmitted and geographically separated symbionts have evolved primarily separately from each other. Remaining traces of recombination might be hints of coinfection events in the early history of the symbiosis.Another genetic feature of the endosymbionts presented here is their relatively low GC content compared to that for related, but free-living Burkholderia species. The bacterial endosymbiont of aphids, Buchnera aphidicola, is known to have some mutational bias toward low GC content (26). Indeed, all of the endosymbionts have significantly lower GC contents than their sequenced free-living relatives, e.g., B. pseudomallei, Burkholderia thailandensis, and Burkholderia cenocepacia, in all conserved loci (see Fig. S6 in the supplemental material). Although the data obtained in this study are only preliminary evidence and future studies at the whole-genome level could certainly provide more insights into the nucleotide evolution of fungal endosymbionts, it is possible that mechanisms similar to those for Buchnera species are responsible for the reduced GC content in the fungal endosymbionts. The observation that the reduction in GC content is not as striking as that in Buchnera species is then well in accordance with the expectation that the fungus-bacterium endosymbiosis is young compared to the Buchnera-aphid mutualistic relationship.To obtain hints about possible cospeciation or horizontal-transmission events, we compared the phylogenetic relationships between the endobacteria and their fungal hosts. Nucleotide sequences of the 18S ribosomal DNA (rDNA), 28S rDNA, and internal transcribed spacer (ITS) regions were chosen to elucidate phylogenetic relationships between fungal hosts (1). These attempts were hampered since 18S rDNA sequences were highly conserved among the fungal isolates. The only variable site distinguished symbiotic from nonsymbiotic R. microsporus strains (see Fig. S7 in the supplemental material). 28S rDNA sequences are known to accumulate single nucleotide changes at a relatively low rate as well (27). Our 28S rDNA data set, with a total length of 604 nucleotides, contained only eight variable sites. With three of them being parsimony informative, no meaningful phylogram could be inferred from the 28S rDNA sequences. The ITS region is known to evolve more rapidly and is used to provide discrimination within species (27). The curated ITS alignments consisted of 621 sites, 14 being variable and 10 being parsimony informative. Four short insertions or deletions, which are mostly ignored by phylogeny inference software, were found. The phylogram based on both ITS data sets was juxtaposed with the endosymbiont tree determined by MLST (Fig. (Fig.4).4). The host strains of the Burkholderia sp. isolates B1, B2, and B6 (ATCC 62417, ATCC 20577, and CBS 261.28, respectively) were identical and reproduced the Pacific group of endobacteria. Strikingly, in contrast to their bacterial partners, the fungal host strains CBS 308.87 (Burkholderia sp. isolate B8) from Australia and CBS 111563 (Burkholderia sp. isolate B3) from Vietnam are members of the Pacific group as well. The strains CBS 700.08 (Burkholderia sp. isolate B7) from Georgia and ATCC 699.68 (Burkholderia sp. isolate B4) from Ukraine appeared to represent the Eurasian branch. This group was known from the bacterial phylogeny, but the fungal clade missed the close relationship to CBS 111563 (Burkholderia sp. isolate B3). Again, the African branch, consisting exclusively of CBS 112285 (Burkholderia sp. isolate B5), shared a common ancestor with the Eurasian group. These results are in accordance with cospeciation of some fungal hosts and their endosymbionts, especially for Burkholderia sp. isolates B1, B2, and B6 and B5, B4, and B7 (Fig. (Fig.4).4). However, there might be first evidence for some host switching events in the history of the endofungal bacteria (Burkholderia sp. isolates B3 and B8). Although this hypothesis is based mainly on a few informative sites within the ITS data set, three insertion or deletion events within the alignment support the extended Pacific group (Burkholderia sp. isolates B1, B2, B6, B3, and B8), indicating the horizontal transfer of symbionts and/or genetic material between strains. While it is possible that multiple events led to this unusual symbiosis, a scenario in which all symbiont strains are derived from an ancestral association seems to be more likely. The endosymbiont-dependent sporulation of the host strain indicates that the fungus-bacterium interaction is highly specialized. Furthermore, vertical transmission of the symbionts through spores is an efficient strategy for rapid distribution (4, 20). Nonetheless, our data suggest that the horizontal transmission of symbionts might also have played a role during the evolution of the endofungal bacteria.Open in a separate windowFIG. 4.Juxtaposition of phylogenetic trees derived from the MLST data of the endofungal symbiont complex (isolates B1 to B8) and the ITS sequence data of the fungal host (strain designations of fungal isolates of the genus Rhizopus are given). Dashed lines are representative of a symbiotic relationship. The numbers on top of the branches indicate the clade probability values. Shading designates similar clade affiliations for the bacterial symbiont and the fungal host.In conclusion, we have investigated eight bacterial endosymbiont strains isolated from toxinogenic R. microsporus strains in pure culture. All isolates are representatives of the same unique “endofungal” ecotype, albeit the hosts'' origins cover all five continents and occur in highly diverse niches. The bacterial endosymbionts share characteristic phenotypic traits, like secondary metabolite production and protein profile, as demonstrated by HPLC-MS and matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-time of flight biotyping, respectively. Phylogenetic analyses (16S rRNA genes) provide strong evidence that all symbiont strains originate from a common ancestor and form a new complex within the genus Burkholderia. This observation is strongly supported by MLST, according to which all eight symbiont isolates can be grouped into continental branches. Results revealing both similar and deviating geographical groupings of fungal isolates in comparison to bacterial endosymbionts allow hypothesizing about the possible cospeciation of fungal and bacterial symbionts and some extent of horizontal-transmission events. All bacterial strains investigated seem to have evolved mainly separately from each other, not showing extensive recombination. In addition, we present preliminary evidence that there might be a mutational bias toward high AT contents, as is known for other endosymbiotic bacteria.  相似文献   

16.
The new dynamical game theoretic model of sex ratio evolution emphasizes the role of males as passive carriers of sex ratio genes. This shows inconsistency between population genetic models of sex ratio evolution and classical strategic models. In this work a novel technique of change of coordinates will be applied to the new model. This will reveal new aspects of the modelled phenomenon which cannot be shown or proven in the original formulation. The underlying goal is to describe the dynamics of selection of particular genes in the entire population, instead of in the same sex subpopulation, as in the previous paper and earlier population genetics approaches. This allows for analytical derivation of the unbiased strategic model from the model with rigorous non-simplified genetics. In effect, an alternative system of replicator equations is derived. It contains two subsystems: the first describes changes in gene frequencies (this is an alternative unbiased formalization of the Fisher-Dusing argument), whereas the second describes changes in the sex ratios in subpopulations of carriers of genes for each strategy. An intriguing analytical result of this work is that the fitness of a gene depends on the current sex ratio in the subpopulation of its carriers, not on the encoded individual strategy. Thus, the argument of the gene fitness function is not constant but is determined by the trajectory of the sex ratio among carriers of that gene. This aspect of the modelled phenomenon cannot be revealed by the static analysis. Dynamics of the sex ratio among gene carriers is driven by a dynamic “tug of war” between female carriers expressing the encoded strategic trait value and random partners of male carriers expressing the average population strategy (a primary sex ratio). This mechanism can be called “double-level selection”. Therefore, gene interest perspective leads to multi-level selection.  相似文献   

17.
A number of genera of soil fungi interact with plant roots to establish symbiotic associations whereby phosphate acquired by the fungus is exchanged for fixed carbon from the plant. Recent progress in investigating these associations, designated as mycorrhizae (sing., mycorrhiza), has led to the identification of specific steps in the establishment of the symbiosis in which the fungus and the plant interact in response to various molecular signals. Some of these signals are conserved with those of theRhizobium–legume nitrogen-fixing symbiosis, suggesting that the two plant–microbe interactions share a common signal transduction pathway. Nevertheless, only legume hosts nodulate in response toRhizobium,whereas the vast majority of flowering plants establish mycorrhizal associations. The key questions for the future are: what are the signal molecules produced by mycorrhizal fungi and how are they perceived by the plant?  相似文献   

18.
In culture contact archaeology, studies of social identities generally focus on the colonized–colonizer dichotomy as the fundamental axis of identification. This emphasis can, however, mask social diversity within colonial or indigenous populations, and it also fails to account for the ways that the division between colonizer and colonized is constructed through the practices of colonization. Through the archaeology of material culture, foodways, and architecture, I examine changing ethnic, racial, and gendered identities among colonists at El Presidio de San Francisco, a Spanish-colonial military settlement. Archaeological data suggest that military settlers were engaged in a double material strategy to consolidate a shared colonial identity, one that minimized differences among colonists and simultaneously heightened distinctions between colonists and local indigenous peoples.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Although dispersal is recognized as a key issue in several fields of population biology (such as behavioral ecology, population genetics, metapopulation dynamics or evolutionary modeling), these disciplines focus on different aspects of the concept and often make different implicit assumptions regarding migration models. Using simulations, we investigate how such assumptions translate into effective gene flow and fixation probability of selected alleles. Assumptions regarding migration type (e.g. source-sink, resident pre-emption, or balanced dispersal) and patterns (e.g. stepping-stone versus island dispersal) have large impacts when demes differ in sizes or selective pressures. The effects of fragmentation, as well as the spatial localization of newly arising mutations, also strongly depend on migration type and patterns. Migration rate also matters: depending on the migration type, fixation probabilities at an intermediate migration rate may lie outside the range defined by the low- and high-migration limits when demes differ in sizes. Given the extreme sensitivity of fixation probability to characteristics of dispersal, we underline the importance of making explicit (and documenting empirically) the crucial ecological/ behavioral assumptions underlying migration models.  相似文献   

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