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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, May 2006, p. 3646-3652, Vol. 72, No. 5
0099-2240/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.72.5.3646-3652.2006
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
The Agricultural Research Organization (ARO), Department of Entomology, Volcani Center, P.O. Box 6, Bet-Dagan 50250,1 Bio-Bee Biological Systems, Kibbutz Sde Eliyahu, Beit Shean Valley 10810,2 Tel Aviv University, Department of Zoology, Ramat Aviv 69978,3 ARO, Newe Ya'ar Research Center, P.O. Box 1021, Ramat Yishay 30095,4 ARO, Gilat Research Center, Mobile Post Negev 85280, Israel5
Received 11 October 2005/ Accepted 8 February 2006
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Whiteflies are small homopterans that feed as nymphs and adults on the phloem sap of plants. The hatching crawler settles near the hatching site, where it goes through four immobile nymphal instars before developing into an adult. The sweet potato whitefly Bemisia tabaci (Gennadius) is a severe agricultural pest in many parts of the world (5). This species consists of several biotypes (3) that have been distinguished largely on the basis of biochemical or molecular diagnostics but whose biological significance is still unclear. Like other phloem-feeding insects, whiteflies require bacteria for supplementing their unbalanced diet. These symbionts are housed in specialized organs called bacteriomes, which are composed of bacteriocytes (2). "Candidatus Portiera aleyrodidarum," the primary symbiont of whiteflies, is an AT-rich member of the gamma subdivision of the Proteobacteria (2). In B. tabaci, "Ca. Portiera aleyrodidarum" is vertically transmitted through bacteriocyte inclusions into the oocyte at the point which will eventually become the pedicel end of the egg (9, 19).
Secondary symbionts of B. tabaci consist of a diverse array of bacteria which are phylogenetically related to other described symbionts of sap-feeding insects. Using transmission electron microscopy, Costa et al. (8) distinguished three types of secondary symbionts, two of which have been tentatively identified as "Candidatus Cardinium hertigii" (Bacteriodetes) (39) and Fritchea bemisiae (Simkaniaceae) (36), respectively. Sequence-based phylogenetic analysis of secondary symbionts found in various B. tabaci biotypes further revealed the presence of two enteric bacteria, one which resembles the aphid symbiont "Candidatus Hamiltonella defensa" and the other with high sequence similarity to the Arsenophonus-like psyllid symbiont (44) and to Wolbachia spp. (27).
A comprehensive characterization of the bacterial community in different B. tabaci populations is crucial for understanding various aspects of that pest's biology, such as the emergence of more aggressive biotypes and the variation in transmission capabilities of plant viruses (25). The research here aimed to profile the bacterial community found in one B. tabaci population. During the analysis, we identified a Rickettsia bellii-like bacterium, and since this is the first record of that bacterium in whiteflies, we further studied its spatial and temporal localization in various stages of whitefly development.
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TABLE 1. Israeli B. tabaci populations screened for the presence of Rickettsia sp.
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550 bp) was amplified using PCR from the insect lysate using the primer combination of 341F with a GC clamp (40-nucleotide, GC-rich sequence) and 907R (Table 2), which targets most known Bacteria, with PCR conditions that permit its amplification from most known Bacteria (26). Reactions were performed in a 50-µl volume containing 5 µl of the template DNA lysate, 400 mM concentrations of each primer, 5 µl of 0.2 mM deoxynucleoside triphosphate, 1x ExTaq buffer, and 1 unit of ExTaq (TaKara Bio, Inc.). Five microliters of the PCR mix was tested using agarose gel electrophoresis, and the remaining 45 µl containing the amplified DNA fragments was then subjected to denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) analysis using the following conditions: separation using a 6% (wt/vol) acrylamide gel (acrylamide-N,N'-methylenebisacrylamide, 37.5:1) prepared in 1x Tris-acetate-EDTA buffer with a denaturing gradient ranging from 20% to 60%. Polymerization was carried out with N,N,N',N''-tetramethylethylenediamine (0.09% vol/vol) and ammonium persulfate (0.04% wt/vol). Electrophoresis for separation of PCR fragments was performed at 90 V and 60°C for 16 h. After electrophoresis, the gels were incubated in ethidium bromide solution (250 ng/ml) for 10 min, rinsed in distilled water, and photographed under UV illumination. Bands representing bacteria were eluted, cloned into the pGEM T-Easy plasmid vector (Promega), and transformed into Escherichia coli. For each bacterium, two colonies were randomly picked and sequenced (ABI 3700 DNA analyzer; Macrogen, Inc., Korea), and the results obtained were compared to known sequences by using the BLAST algorithm in the NCBI database. |
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TABLE 2. PCR primer sets used in this study
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Characterization of Rickettsia sp. in B. tabaci.
To determine the phylogenetic affiliation of the newly discovered Rickettsia sp. with rickettsial groups previously classified (spotted fever, typhus, and ancestral), we have followed the genotypic scheme suggested by Fournier et al. (12). All PCR analyses were performed using specific primers and PCR amplification conditions as specified in the literature (Table 2). A nearly full-length segment of the 16S rRNA gene was obtained using the primer combinations 27F/Rb-R and Rb-F/1494R with the parameters described above. The two 16S rRNA gene contigs were assembled using DNAMAN (Lynnon Biosoft Vaudreuil, Quebec, Canada). The citric acid cycle (citrate synthase) gene gltA was amplified and assembled in the same way, and the presence of the rickettsial outer membrane protein (rOmp) encoding genes ompA and ompB was tested. The sequences of the Rickettsia genes obtained were deposited in GenBank.
Establishment of a clean B. tabaci line.
In order to characterize the Rickettsia sp. distribution in B. tabaci, a Rickettsia-free line that can serve as a negative control was required. Most of the B. tabaci populations tested exhibited variation in their infection status (Table 1); therefore, an attempt was made to establish a Rickettsia-free line out of the same whitefly colony by isolating 30 mated whitefly females from a line collected in a sweet pepper greenhouse during June 2004 in order to form separate reproductive lines. Each female was allowed to oviposit individually on a sweet pepper (Capsicum annum) leaf disk (55-mm diameter) placed on 1% agar in a transparent plastic cup, maintained at 25°C and 60% ± 10% relative humidity and a photoperiod of 14 h of light and 10 h of darkness, until she died. Upon emergence, at least five progeny of each female were placed alive in 96% alcohol, and the infection status of the various lines was tested by subjecting samples from three individuals to PCR with Rickettsia-specific primers.
In situ hybridization.
Adults, eggs, and the various instars were collected with a needle, while ovaries were dissected in a drop of saline buffer under a stereoscopic microscope. The fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) procedure generally followed the method of Sakurai et al. (32), with slight modifications. Specimens were collected directly into Carnoy's fixative (chloroform:ethanol:glacial acetic acid, 6:3:1) and fixed overnight. After fixation, the samples were decolorized in 6% H2O2 in ethanol for 2 h and then hybridized overnight in hybridization buffer (20 mM Tris-HCl [pH 8.0], 0.9 M NaCl, 0.01% sodium dodecyl sulfate, 30% formamide) containing 10 pmol of fluorescent probes/ml. Based on the Rickettsia sp. and "Ca. Portiera aleyrodidarum" 16S rRNA sequences, two DNA probes were designed using Primer3 software (30) (source code available at http://fokker.wi.mit.edu/primer3/) and were checked for specificity using the Ribosomal Database Project II "probe match" analysis tool (http://rdp.cme.msu.edu/); the probe BTP1-Cy3 (5'-Cy3-TGTCAGTGTCAGCCCAGAAG-3') was designed to specifically target "Ca. Portiera aleyrodidarum," and the probe Rb1-Cy5 (5'-Cy5-TCCACGTCGCCGTCTTGC-3') was designed to target Rickettsia. Stained samples were whole mounted and viewed under an IX81Olympus FluoView500 confocal microscope. Specificity of the detection was confirmed using the following controls: no-probe control, RNase-digested control, and Rickettsia-free whiteflies.
Nucleotide sequence accession numbers.
The sequences of the Rickettsia genes obtained in this study were deposited in GenBank under the accession numbers DQ077707 (16S rRNA gene) and DQ077708 (gltA).
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FIG. 1. DGGE analysis of PCR-amplified, 16S rRNA gene fragments of bacteria found in three individual Bemisia tabaci females. Portiera, "Ca. Portiera aleyrodidarum;" Hamiltonella, "Ca. Hamiltonella defensa."
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Establishment of Rickettsia sp. identity.
The combination of most known Bacteria primers with the Rickettsia-specific primers Rb-F and Rb-R yielded a 1,445-bp sequence of the 16S rRNA gene which exhibited highest sequence similarity to the proteobacterium R. bellii (99%). The use of specific primers for the gltA gene resulted in sequences of 1,210 bp showing 97% similarity to the tick symbiont R. bellii citrate synthase gene. Presence of the ompA and ompB genes could not be detected in PCR using specific primers.
Establishment of a clean B. tabaci line.
Out of 30 isofemale lines, the progeny (F1) of five females tested negative for Rickettsia sp. Consequently, the other 25 lines were discarded, and the five Rickettsia-free lines were further reared. The F2 and F3 generations of these five lines were also found to be free of Rickettsia sp. and were mixed into one population.
In situ hybridization. (i) Primary symbionts.
Throughout the life cycle of B. tabaci, the probe designed to specifically target the primary symbiont "Ca. Portiera aleyrodidarum" consistently produced signal exclusively inside the bacteriomes (Fig. 2 to 4).
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FIG. 2. FISH of B. tabaci adults. (a) Bacteriocytes (arrow) and Rickettsia sp. (arrowhead) in a female abdomen (combined Z sections). (b) Bacteriocytes (arrow), and Rickettsia sp. (arrowhead) in female legs and abdomen (one section). (c) Rickettsia sp. concentrated around the follicle cells (arrow head) and the gut tube (arrow) (one section). (d) Female head (one section). Note the chitin autofluorescence. Right panels, bright field and fluorescence; left panels, fluorescence only.
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FIG. 4. FISH of B. tabaci nymphs. (a) Crawlers; (b) third instar; (c) fourth instar. Rickettsia sp. (blue), "Ca. Portiera aleyrodidarum" (red). Note the "Y"-shaped distribution. Right panels, combined Z sections of bright field and fluorescence; left panels, fluorescence only.
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FIG. 3. FISH of B. tabaci eggs. (a) Mature oocyte surrounded by external bacteriocytes (red) and a Rickettsia sp. (blue). Note the concentration of the Rickettsia sp. in the pedicel area (arrow). (b) Less than 24 h old, showing bacteriocyte (red) and Rickettsia sp. (blue, arrow). (c) Ca. 48 h old, showing bacteriocyte (red) and Rickettsia sp. (blue). (d) More than 48 h old. Note the pedicel autofluorescence. Right panels, combined Z sections of bright field and fluorescence; left panels, fluorescence only.
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(iv) Distribution of Rickettsia sp. in nymphs.
The distribution of the Rickettsia sp. in B. tabaci nymphs seems to be random in terms of both quantity and space; the signal in some larvae suggests the presence of large numbers of symbionts, while the signal in others is lower (Fig. 4a). Rickettsia seems to be located throughout the nymphal body, excluding the bacteriomes, as in the eggs. Although the signal can be detected throughout the nymph, there is higher intensity in a "Y"-shaped structure, following the contour of the whitefly's gut (19) (Fig. 4b and c). The random spatial distribution can be seen in all nymphal stages (Fig. 4). The absolute confinement of "Ca. Portiera aleyrodidarum" to the bacteriomes, as opposed to the characteristic random signal for Rickettsia is noticeable when both probes are hybridized on the same crawler (Fig. 4c).
(v) Controls.
The no-probe and RNase-digested controls showed fine autofluorescence of the 543 and 633 laser lines. In whiteflies from the Rickettsia-free line, bacteriomes are stained with the "Ca. Portiera aleyrodidarum"-specific probe, while there is no signal from the Rickettsia-specific probe (data not shown).
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The order Rickettsiales is composed of a coherent group of obligate intracellular symbionts of eukaryotic cells within the alpha subdivision of the Proteobacteria (42). The genus Rickettsia is usually described from blood-feeding arthropods, renowned for the ability of some of its members to cause rickettsioses, and was rarely reported from phytophagous insects (1). To establish the identity of the whitefly bacterium and further characterize its phylogenetic affiliation, we followed the guidelines of Fournier et al. (12). These authors suggested that a bacterium can be ascribed the genus Rickettsia if it shares >98.1% similarity of the 16S rRNA gene and >86.5% similarity of the gltA gene of any known Rickettsia sp. The 16S rRNA and gltA genes of the symbiont described from B. tabaci exhibit 99 and 97% similarity (respectively) with the previously described Rickettsia bellii, and that bacterium could therefore be considered a member of the genus Rickettsia. According to Fournier et al. (12), a Rickettsia sp. in which the ompA and ompB genes are absent belongs to the ancestral group. Because our PCR analyses failed to detect the presence of these genes, it was concluded that the B. tabaci Rickettsia sp. is a member of the ancestral group, together with R. bellii. Other than the pea aphid Rickettsia sp., the first record of a Rickettsia sp. in a phytophagous insect, that bacterium has been reported from the orders Psocoptera, Coleoptera, and Hymenoptera, which are not known to have interaction with vertebrates (20, 22, 41, 43). Outside the Insecta, a Rickettsia sp. was also found in phytophagous organisms, such as the spider mite Tetranychus urticae (21).
Whole-mount fluorescence in situ hybridization of various developmental stages established, for the first time, the long-assumed specific localization of the B. tabaci primary symbiont "Ca. Portiera aleyrodidarum" in the bacteriocytes. This technique also shows a random and uneven localization of the Rickettsia sp. in most of the B. tabaci eggs, nymphal stages, and adults tested. In various adult and nymph specimens, the bacteria are seen aggregating along the gut structure (Fig. 2 and 4). Although the function of the polygonal structures is currently unknown, this specific Rickettsia distribution may serve as a clue in future studies. The detection of Rickettsia around the gut structure and in between the follicle cells is unique compared with other localization data: secondary symbionts of plant-feeding insects have been reported from bacteriomes, within the secondary bacteriocytes, and in the hemolymph (aphid) (16, 17) in the syncytium (part of psyllid bacteriome) (34) and within bacteria themselves, forming a secondary symbiosis (in mealybugs) (38). Whole-mount FISH of one Acyrthosiphon pisum strain revealed the presence of Rickettsia in two types of cells, secondary bacteriocytes and sheath cells. These cells, together with the primary bacteriocytes containing a Buchnera sp., form the bacteriome in the body cavity of aphids (32).
The fact that the Rickettsia sp. can be detected inside the eggs of B. tabaci, and that it is detected throughout the insect development, implies vertical transmission of that bacterium. Our data suggest that the Rickettsia enters the oocyte in the ovaries either by penetrating the oocyte via the pedicel (as suggested from Fig. 3) or by penetrating the bacteriocytes. After entering the egg, the bacteria start multiplying and spreading during embryogenesis. The hatching nymph carries Rickettsia throughout its body, with seemingly higher concentrations around the gut. Adult females apparently carry a higher load of Rickettsia than males, possibly to enable transmission of the bacteria to the next generation.
Studies exploring the influence of secondary symbionts in aphids revealed quite a number of roles these tenants play in their host's biology, including conferring resistance to parasitoids (11, 28), influencing host plant preferences (11, 23, 37), and conferring heat resistance (24). On the other hand, Sakurai et al. (32) showed that a Rickettsia-infected A. pisum strain exhibits a smaller fresh body weight and a lower total number of offspring than a Rickettsia-free strain. These authors also found that the presence of Rickettsia significantly suppressed the population of Buchnera and postulated that these phenomena may be correlated (32). Other studies investigating the fitness effects of the Rickettsia sp. indicate that the presence of that bacterium generally induces negative effects on the aphid hosts, but the intensity of these effects and their consequences depend on environmental factors (6, 7, 24).
The effect of Rickettsia sp. on B. tabaci is yet to be resolved; however, since it is highly prevalent in all tested Israeli B. tabaci populations (Table 1), it can be speculated that its phenotype is advantageous under certain conditions but may be deleterious enough under others to prevent fixation. Moreover, the concentration of the bacteria around the gut tube may indicate a nutritional dependence. Another possible hint for Rickettsia influence may come from the work of Gerling and Fried (18) who found a unique phenomenon of density-dependent sterility in the B. tabaci parasitoid Eretmocerus mundus (Hymenoptera: Aphelinidae) and suggested the involvement of microorganisms. A fitness comparison between Rickettsia-infected and noninfected whitefly individuals would provide the information required for understanding the cost and the benefit of this association for the whitefly host.
This work was supported by Research Grant no. IS-3633-04 R from BARD, the United States-Israel Binational Agricultural Research and Development Fund, to E. Zchori-Fein and by a financial contribution made by Koppert Biological Systems, The Netherlands.
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