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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, January 2004, p. 273-279, Vol. 70, No. 1
0099-2240/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AEM.70.1.273-279.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Christian Stauffer,1 and Hervé Merçot2
Institute of Forest Entomology, Forest Pathology and Forest Protection, BOKUUniversity of Natural Resources and Applied Life Sciences, 1190 Vienna, Austria,1 Laboratoire Dynamique du Génome et Evolution, Institut Jacques Monod, CNRS-Universités Paris 6,7, 75251 Paris Cedex 05, France2
Received 2 July 2003/ Accepted 24 September 2003
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-proteobacterium and symbiont of arthropods (4, 26, 34, 42). This bacterium has an intracellular lifestyle, and infections occur throughout host somatic and germ line tissues of insect species (15). As a reproductive parasite, it manipulates host reproduction and favors in this way its own dispersal in host populations. The most common Wolbachia effect described so far is cytoplasmic incompatibility (CI) (8, 21). CI arises when infected males mate with uninfected females and results in embryonic lethality. Reciprocal crosses between infected females and uninfected males do not express CI. This pattern can be interpreted through a two-function model (29, 42): Wolbachia would somehow modify the sperm of infected males during spermatogenesis (modification, or mod function), leading to embryo death unless Wolbachia is present in the egg and restores viability (rescue, or resc function). The mod and resc functions seem to interact in a specific manner, because CI can also be observed in crosses between males and females that are both infected, if the two partners bear different Wolbachia variants. CI allows Wolbachia to invade host populations because it increases the fitness of infected females relative to that of uninfected ones. Both theoretical and empirical studies (6, 16, 19, 36) have highlighted the key role of three parameters in the invasion dynamics: (i) CI level (the percentage of embryos killed by CI in incompatible crosses), (ii) the fitness effect of infection on female hosts (apart from CI), and (iii) the bacterial transmission efficiency from mothers to offspring. The studies described above showed that the frequency of infected individuals presents a stable equilibrium depending on these three parameters. The infection frequency reaches this stable equilibrium value only if it first passes a threshold frequency, the level of which also depends upon these three parameters.
CI is known for a variety of insect species, including the European cherry fruit fly, Rhagoletis cerasi (Diptera, Tephritidae). Early studies demonstrated high levels of incompatibility between populations of R. cerasi (1, 2), the basis of which was recently shown to involve Wolbachia (32). Populations of R. cerasi are either infected by a single Wolbachia variant, wCer1, or superinfected by two variants, wCer1 and -2. Incompatibility occurs between males from doubly infected populations and females from singly infected populations, suggesting the wCer2 infection as the cause of CI (32). However, the picture is not perfectly clear. First, although it is likely that wCer1 once invaded the species through CI, the ability of this variant to induce CI cannot be tested, because populations lacking wCer1 have never been found. Second, the direct demonstration that wCer2 is responsible for CI has not yet been provided by a set of replicate crosses with individuals of known infection status. The establishment of standardized infected and uninfected laboratory lines is time-consuming and not straightforward, given the long generation time and specialized biology of R. cerasi.
In this paper, we report on the artificial transfer of Wolbachia between two different dipteran families, from the true fruit fly, R. cerasi, into the geneticist's fruit fly, Drosophila simulans (Diptera, Drosophilidae), an extensively studied Wolbachia host (24). These experiments were done with two major goals in mind. The first objective was to obtain lines singly infected by wCer1 and wCer2 in order to test their ability to induce CI. Cytoplasmic injections have indeed been proven to be an efficient technique for stimulating Wolbachia segregation (9). The second objective was to test the prediction regarding the consequences of Wolbachia-host coevolution on three key parameters: maternal transmission efficiency, fitness effects, and CI levels. Selection on host factors tends to increase the efficiency of maternal transmission and to decrease CI levels and fitness costs (35). Selection on bacterial factors tends to increase the efficiency of maternal transmission and to decrease fitness costs. Selection on Wolbachia factors for CI levels is neutral as long as population structure is not too pronounced (30, 35). Coevolution is thus expected to lead to high transmission rates, low fitness costs, and low levels of CI. Reciprocally, low transmission efficiency, negative fitness effects, and high CI levels are expected after an injection of Wolbachia into a new host (11). The results presented are partially in agreement with these predictions. Indeed, a fitness cost to the host and low transmission efficiency are observed, as expected, but the level of CI is clearly reduced.
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Wolbachia injection and line establishment.
The transfer of wCer1 and wCer2 into the D. simulans STC strain was performed by cytoplasmic injection (33). Using a microneedle (Femtotips; Eppendorf), cytoplasm was taken from R. cerasi eggs and injected into the posterior part of recipient eggs. Donor eggs were obtained by dissection directly from ovaries, providing fresh and weakly differentiated embryos. Fresh receiver eggs were collected from the egg-laying plates every hour. Recipient eggs were dechorionated manually prior to injection.
D. simulans females developing from injected eggs represent the generation 0 (G0). Each G0 female was crossed with one G0 male and was left for laying before its infection status was determined by PCR. The infection status of the offspring was determined by PCR on a mass extraction of three G1 females. In lines in which infection was detected in G1, 10 G1 sisters were mated to their brothers and left to lay separately before their infection status was determined.
During the experiment, all lines were maintained at 25°C at low larval densities in vials with axenic medium (14). Rates of transmission from mothers to offspring were low in transinfected lines, imposing stringent conditions for maintenance of infection. Thus, at every generation, and for every transinfected line, six females were left to lay independently before their infection status was determined. The next generation was then started by using offspring from infected females only.
CI tests.
Individual crosses were done with 3-day-old virgin males and 4- to 5-day-old virgin females. Each cross was initiated by placing one male and one female in a vial with axenic medium. Copulation was monitored, allowing the discarding of pairs in which it lasted less than 15 min, to ensure that sperm was actually transferred. The male was then removed, and the female was supplied with an egg-laying plate for 48 h. Upon removal of the female, the eggs were placed at 25°C for 24 h before the egg hatch was measured by counting all eggs. Laying plates with less than 20 eggs were discarded. All individuals from infected strains were checked by PCR for the presence of Wolbachia.
Maternal transmission rates.
Maternal transmission was first roughly estimated as the proportion of infected female daughters from infected mothers during the line establishment, up to G10. The proportion of infected males was similarly assessed in G8, G9, and G10. If CI occurs, this infection rate is an overestimate of the actual transmission rate: CI will increase the proportion of infected adults, because uninfected eggs tend to die. The actual maternal transmission rate of two lines was thus estimated after crossing infected females with uninfected males in G20.
Measurements of fitness effects.
Female fertility and fecundity were taken as parameters for the fitness effects of infections. These were investigated during CI assay experiments and therefore by using the same mating protocol. For fertility assays, uninfected males were crossed to infected and uninfected females, and hatching rates were compared. For fecundity assays, infected and uninfected males were crossed with infected and uninfected females. Fecundity was estimated by counting the eggs laid per female in 48 h.
PCR-RFLP and sequencing.
DNA was extracted from flies according to the method described by ONeill et al. (25). The PCR primers used were general primer 81F-691R of the Wolbachia surface protein gene wsp (44) as well as wCer1- and wCer2-specific wsp primer pairs (32), ftsZf1-ftsZr1 of the cell cycle gene ftsZ (41), and the 16S rRNA-specific primer for Wolbachia (25). PCRs were done in reaction volumes of 12.5 µl for the infection screening or in 50 µl for post-PCR procedures: 1 or 4 µl of template DNA, 1x reaction buffer, 0.2 mM deoxynucleoside triphosphates (dNTPs), 0.2 µM forward and reverse primers, and 0.5 or 2 U of Taq DNA polymerase (Gibco), and sterile water was added to the final volume. PCR was run under conditions described by Zhou et al. (44). wsp, ftsZ, and 16S rRNA PCR products from wCer1-infected R. cerasi, wCer2-infected D. simulans, and wAu infected D. simulans were cycle sequenced with Big Dye (Perkin-Elmer). wCer2 and wAu differ in their 81F-691R wsp sequence by one substitution (32). This mutation site proved to be a wCer2-specific restriction site for Fnu4H1. wCer2-infected lines were PCR-restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) digested with Fnu4HI (New England Biolabs) under the standard conditions recommended by the restriction enzyme provider, in order to exclude any line or strain contamination with wAu.
Statistical analysis.
CI and fertility data were analyzed with Wilcoxon's nonparametric tests. Fecundity data were analyzed by analysis of variance (ANOVA).
Nucleotide sequence accession number.
The ftsZ sequences from wCer1, wCer2, and wAu have been deposited in the GenBank nucleotide sequence database under accession no. AY227737 to -39, respectively. The 16S rRNA gene sequences from wCer1, wCer2, and wAu have been deposited under accession no. AY227740 to -42, respectively.
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Transmission rates.
The infection rates in offspring from wCer2 mothers were measured during the line establishment from generations 1 to 10, giving the following estimates: 54% in RC20 (n = 30; 95% confidence interval, 36.2 to 71.8%), 61% in RC21 (n = 102; 95% confidence interval, 51.5 to 70.5%), 65% in RC33 (n = 50; 95% confidence interval, 51.8 to 78.2%), 80% in RC45 (n = 129; 95% confidence interval, 73.1 to 86.9%), 52% in RC50 (n = 43; 95% confidence interval, 37 to 66.9%), 86% in RC78 (n = 33; 95% confidence interval, 74.2 to 97.8%). These infection rates are overestimates of the maternal transmission rate, because the infection status of fathers was not checked. The proportion of infected individuals could be greater in crossings between infected females and infected males than between infected females and uninfected males, because CI selects for higher infection rates in the offspring.
The actual maternal transmission rates in RC21 and RC45 were estimated in G20 by crossing infected females with uninfected males. The transmission rates were 77% for RC21 (n = 60; 95% confidence interval, 66.3 to 87.6%) and 55% for RC45 (n = 71; 95% confidence interval, 43.4 to 66.6%).
CI assays.
The expression of CI was tested by crossing uninfected females with infected and uninfected males. CI is observed if embryonic mortality is significantly higher when males are infected. This was investigated by using four infected lines (RC21, RC45, RC33, and RC50) and their uninfected counterparts (RC21Ø, RC45Ø, RC33Ø, and RC50Ø). As shown in Table 1, wCer2 was found to induce CI in 8 out of 10 experiments, although at a low level.
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TABLE 1. Crossing experiments to test whether wCer2 does induce cytoplasmic incompatibility in D. simulans
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TABLE 2. Test of whether wCer2 is able to rescue its own modification in D. simulansa
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TABLE 3. Test of whether wCer2 totally rescues its own modification in D. simulansa
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TABLE 4. Fertility test of wCer2-infected D. simulans femalesa
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TABLE 5. Descriptive statistics for fecundity testing of wCer2-infected D. simulans femalesa
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TABLE 6. ANOVA results for fecundity testing of wCer2-infected D. simulans females
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Both wCer1 and wCer2 were still detectable by PCR in G1 following injection, suggesting that both variants reached the germ cells of G0 females. However, wCer1 was lost from all lines between G1 and G2, suggesting that it was unable to develop properly in this new host or to actively maintain itself in the germ line. This loss was unfortunate, because it prevented us from determining the phenotypic effects of wCer1, yet it also proved to be an informative result. The incapacity of wCer1 to develop in a new host might reflect a higher genetic divergence from wCer2 and a very tight and specific adaptation to the original host. This interpretation is consistent with the view that wCer1 is a more ancient infection in R. cerasi than is wCer2, as suggested by infection patterns in natural populations (32). On the contrary, wCer2 was still present in G2. Although the efficiency of maternal transmission is low in D. simulans, imposing a stringent protocol for infection maintenance, we still possess, at the time of writing, the six lines derived from six different G0 females.
CI levels, fitness effects, and transmission efficiency.
We found that wCer2 can induce CI in D. simulans, although embryonic lethality is far from 100%. This confirms that wCer2 is able to induce CI and strengthens the view that it is responsible for the patterns of incompatibility observed between R. cerasi populations (2).
We observed that wCer2 is able to rescue its own CI, but only partially so. This probably results from imperfect maternal transmission (i.e., not all eggs are infected and therefore protected from CI). The transmission rates that would be necessary to explain the imperfect rescue would be 55 to 65% for RC21 and RC45. Similar transmission rate values were observed for both lines at G20. Thus, it seems that wCer2 is not, strictly speaking, self-incompatible. Partial nonrescue is simply due to imperfect maternal transmission.
wCer2 does not affect female fertility, but seems to reduce female fecundity by at least 10%. Negative effects on host fitness have been reported previously in natural as well as artificial Wolbachia-host associations (19, 21). Intriguingly, in one data set (involving lines RC21 and RC21Ø), females were found to lay more when mated with infected malesa result that we fail to interpret in adaptive terms.
wCer1 was not transmitted after G1, while wCer2 had a low transmission rate. This can be seen by the infection frequency observed during line maintenance, giving a mean value of 66% for the six transinfected lines. Transmission efficiency per se was estimated at G20 in lines RC21 and RC45, giving a mean value of 65.5%, which is much lower than any maternal transmission rate reported so far for natural Wolbachia-host associations. We observed considerable variability within and between the transinfected lines in their infection rates with wCer2 over a long time, here represented by the data from generations 1 to 10 and from generation 20. This variability was not correlated to generation number or lines. We do not yet have an explanation for this finding.
Testing theory.
Theory predicts that Wolbachia-host coevolution should lead to a decline of CI level and fitness costs and to an increase in maternal transmission (30, 35). Inversely, strong CI, strong costs, and low transmission rates are expected in new associations (11). We tested this prediction by creating a new association and measuring the parameters. As expected, fitness costs to the host and low transmission rates were observed, but CI levels were very low. Wolbachia density in male testes has been recognized as a key factor for the expression of CI in Wolbachia associations (8, 12, 40). Whether the lower expression of CI of wCer2 in D. simulans is correlated with a reduced density still needs to be assessed. However, from an evolutionary perspective, there are two possible explanations why CI levels might be low in the novel wCer2 D. simulans association.
First, D. simulans might actively repress the expression of wCer2. This is plausible because wCer2 is very closely related to wAu, a natural Wolbachia variant of D. simulans, which does not appear to induce CI in this host (10, 20, 23, 31). Although wAu might have lost its ability to induce CI, regardless of the host background, a possibility remains that D. simulans actively and specifically represses its expression. This being so, D. simulans might recognize wCer2 as wAu-like Wolbachia and therefore repress it.
Alternatively, the wCer2 infection might be maladapted to the new host and therefore not be able to induce high levels of CI in a new host background. Hence, the prediction that CI should be high in new associations might be incorrect. Levels of CI expressed in different host species have so far only been compared in experiments in which the original and novel host were closely related (5, 11, 27). High levels of CI were observed after the transfer of wRi from D. simulans into Drosophila serrata (11) and after the transfer of wMel-infected D. melanogaster into D. simulans (27). However, these results could reflect the evolutionary closeness of Drosophila species rather than the ability of Wolbachia to express high CI in any background. High CI levels might in fact not always be the sign of a recent Wolbachia-host association. Prout (30) and Turelli (35) demonstrated that within panmictic populations, bacterial variants inducing higher CI levels are not selected for, but Frank (17) showed that if the population is structured, bacterial variants inducing higher levels of CI are advantaged. Population structure might be sufficiently important for strong CI levels to be maintained in the long term.
The likelihood of horizontal transfers.
From phylogenies of Wolbachia and their hosts, as well as direct observation, it is now clear that horizontal transfers between species can occur (18, 22, 25, 38, 41, 44). Wolbachia in arthropods could be seen as a huge metapopulation with infected host species as habitats for various subpopulations (7). Within host species, extinction and colonization might regularly occur through loss or gain of infection, and the current distribution of Wolbachia could represent a global and dynamic equilibrium between these two processes (43).
Following the ideas of Combes (13, 39), it can be generalized that Wolbachia must cross three filters (ecological, physiological, and population) before it is established in a new host species. The ecological filter is defined by the interaction between an existing and a potential new host species. It will condition the probability for Wolbachia of getting in contact with a new species within an individual's body. The physiological filter is defined by the ability of Wolbachia to colonize the germ line of an individual. Finally, the population filter conditions the ability of Wolbachia to invade and maintain itself in host populations, which depends on the values of the three main parameters: strength of CI, maternal transmission efficiency, and fitness effects on the host (19, 36).
Here, the ecological filter was bypassed as Wolbachia was intentionally injected into the new host. wCer1 and wCer2 were both established in the germ line. However, wCer1 was lost after the first generations, whereas wCer2 was maintained. The three parameters influencing Wolbachia invasion dynamics (CI level, transmission efficiency, and fitness effects) were far from optimal. Based on formulas from the model of Hoffmann et al. (19), and using the estimated parameter values, the only possible infection frequency at equilibrium for wCer2 is 0. In other words, should wCer2 cross the ecological barriers by natural means, it would not be able to invade populations of D. simulans, nor would it be able to maintain itself starting from a high frequency. Our results thus suggest that the horizontal transfer between evolutionarily distant species was, in this case at least, very unlikely or impossible. Within the Wolbachia metapopulation, subpopulations (i.e., Wolbachia variants) seem to be adapted to local habitats (species or groups of closely related species). The population filter, the ability to invade host populations, might in fact be the most critical step, preventing Wolbachia from invading all arthropod species.
This work was partially supported by a grant from the Austrian Science Foundation FWF (P-14024-BIO).
Present address: Department of Biology, University College London, London NW1 2HE, United Kingdom. ![]()
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