| Literature DB >> 22174680 |
Uzma Alam1, Jan Medlock, Corey Brelsfoard, Roshan Pais, Claudia Lohs, Séverine Balmand, Jozef Carnogursky, Abdelaziz Heddi, Peter Takac, Alison Galvani, Serap Aksoy.
Abstract
Tsetse flies are vectors of the protozoan parasite African trypanosomes, which cause sleeping sickness disease in humans and nagana in livestock. Although there are no effective vaccines and efficacious drugs against this parasite, vector reduction methods have been successful in curbing the disease, especially for nagana. Potential vector control methods that do not involve use of chemicals is a genetic modification approach where flies engineered to be parasite resistant are allowed to replace their susceptible natural counterparts, and Sterile Insect technique (SIT) where males sterilized by chemical means are released to suppress female fecundity. The success of genetic modification approaches requires identification of strong drive systems to spread the desirable traits and the efficacy of SIT can be enhanced by identification of natural mating incompatibility. One such drive mechanism results from the cytoplasmic incompatibility (CI) phenomenon induced by the symbiont Wolbachia. CI can also be used to induce natural mating incompatibility between release males and natural populations. Although Wolbachia infections have been reported in tsetse, it has been a challenge to understand their functional biology as attempts to cure tsetse of Wolbachia infections by antibiotic treatment damages the obligate mutualistic symbiont (Wigglesworthia), without which the flies are sterile. Here, we developed aposymbiotic (symbiont-free) and fertile tsetse lines by dietary provisioning of tetracycline supplemented blood meals with yeast extract, which rescues Wigglesworthia-induced sterility. Our results reveal that Wolbachia infections confer strong CI during embryogenesis in Wolbachia-free (Gmm(Apo)) females when mated with Wolbachia-infected (Gmm(Wt)) males. These results are the first demonstration of the biological significance of Wolbachia infections in tsetse. Furthermore, when incorporated into a mathematical model, our results confirm that Wolbachia can be used successfully as a gene driver. This lays the foundation for new disease control methods including a population replacement approach with parasite resistant flies. Alternatively, the availability of males that are reproductively incompatible with natural populations can enhance the efficacy of the ongoing sterile insect technique (SIT) applications by eliminating the need for chemical irradiation.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 22174680 PMCID: PMC3234226 DOI: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1002415
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Pathog ISSN: 1553-7366 Impact factor: 6.823
Figure 1The effects of antibiotic treatment on G. m. morsitans.
(A) Effect of yeast supplementation on percent larval deposition over two gonotrophic cycles between wild type flies maintained on normal blood supplemented with antibiotics (ampicillin or tetracycline) compared to flies maintained on yeast supplementation. The sample size (n) is above each column, and is represented as the number of females alive at the beginning of each gonotrophic cycle. (B) PCR analysis shows the Gmm flies are positive for Wigglesworthia (Wig Thic), Sodalis (Sod Chit) and Wolbachia (Wol Groel). In contrast offspring resulting from tetracycline treated females (A and B) lack all three of the symbionts. The bottom panel shows gDNA quality as measured by tsetse β-tubulin. (C) Presence of Wolbachia infections in late developing egg chambers of Gmm females. Nuclei are indicated by the blue DAPI stain and Wolbachia is shown by the red stain (D&E) Presence and absence of Wolbachia infections in early developing egg chambers of Gmm and Gmm females respectively. (F) Comparison of adult longevity between female Gmm and Gmm over a forty-day period on yeast supplemented diet. Error bars are reflective of standard error. Data points are offset for clarity.
CI expression shown by average larval deposition rates in crosses between Gmm females mated with Gmm males.
| Cross type | Larval deposition rate 1st gonotrophic cycle | Larval deposition rate 2nd gonotrophic cycle | ||
| ♀ | x | ♂ | 0.68±0.01ab; | 0.65±0.07ab; |
| ♀ | x | ♂ | 0.87±0.06a; | 0.89±0.16a; |
| ♀ | x | ♂ | 0.61±0.20ab; | 0.53±0.18b; |
| ♀ | x | ♂ | 0.10±0.02c; | 0c; |
| ♀ | x | ♂ | 0.68±0.14b; | 0.59±0.07ab; |
Larval deposition rates for each gonotrophic cycle and each cross type replicate were determined by dividing the number of larvae deposited per day by the number of remaining females in the cage on the day of larviposition, and summing the values for each gonotrophic cycle. Mean deposition rate values with different superscripted letters are statistically different from each other (P<0.05) using Tukey-Kramer post hoc multiple comparison tests within each gonotrophic cycle, ie., a, b, and c are significantly different from each other, c but not a and b are different from ab). n was calculated by combining the total number of females alive when the first larva were deposited for the three replicates of each cross type. Gmm = Wild-type flies with all three symbionts, Gmm flies treated with tetracycline that lack Wigglesworthia, Sodalis, and Wolbachia, and Gmm = flies treated with ampicillin that lack only Wigglesworthia.
Eclosion rates (%) of deposited pupae.
| Cross type | % Pupal Eclosion 1st gonotrophic cycle | % Pupal Eclosion 2nd gonotrophic cycle | ||
| ♀ | x | ♂ | 82±8.0a; | 89±5.0a; |
| ♀ | x | ♂ | 83±9.0a; | 93±6.0a; |
| ♀ | x | ♂ | 60±18.0ab; | 52±24.0a; |
| ♀ | x | ♂ | 17±28.0b; | NA; |
| ♀ | x | ♂ | 88±7.0a; | 75±13a; |
Mean % pupal eclosion values depicted by different superscripted letters are statistically different from each other (P<0.05) using Tukey-Kramer post hoc multiple comparison tests within each gonotrophic cycle, i.e., a and b are significantly different from each other, both not different from ab. n = the total number of pupae deposited.
Figure 2Wolbachia-induced CI phenotype in G. m. morsitans.
Normal reproduction between Gmm females and males is discernible by a developing oocyte indicated by the white arrow and the presence of a larva in the uterus indicated by the pink arrow, following the first gonotrophic cycle. (B) Unmated adult female tsetse. Unmated Gmm females have an empty uterus and multiple developing oocytes indicated by white arrows. Note the transparent nature of the spermatheca reflective of lack of sperm (C) Manifested CI. CI is indicated by Gmm females mated with Gmm males by the absence of a larva in the uterus and deformed embryo indicated by the blue arrow. Many of these embryos were aborted without hatching into larva. Orange arrows indicate spermathecae in each image. Images were collected forty days (corresponding to the second gonotrophic cycle) post mating.
Cytoplasmic-incompatibility parameter estimates.
| Parameter | Median | 95% Credible Interval |
| Fecundity Benefit of | 0.1925 | [−0.0920, 0.5784] |
| Fecundity Benefit of | 0.2839 | [0.0854, 0.5420] |
| CI Strength | 0.7976 | [0.6295, 0.9025] |
| Transmission Failure | 0.1073 | [0.0069, 0.2274] |
Shown are the posterior median and 95% credible interval from Bayesian Markov chain Monte Carlo estimation.
Population-genetics quantity estimates: the posterior median and 95% credible interval from Bayesian Markov chain Monte Carlo estimation.
| Estimate | Median | 95% Credible Interval |
|
| 0.9689 | [0.8559, 0.9984] |
| Release Threshold | 0.0000 | [0.0000, 0.3958] |
| Time to Fixation (days) | 529 | [296, ——] |
Wolbachia fixation prevalence is the level at which Wolbachia is stably present in the population. Release threshold is the number of Wolbachia-positive tsetse that must be released into a Wolbachia-free population in order for Wolbachia to ultimately go to fixation, relative to the size of the existing population. Time to fixation is the number of days required to go from 10% initial Wolbachia prevalence to 95% of the fixation prevalence; its upper 95% CI is undefined because for more than 2.5% of samples, a release of 10% of the population is below the release threshold so that Wolbachia is driven from the population for these samples.