| Literature DB >> 23462112 |
Jeremy K Herren1, Juan C Paredes, Fanny Schüpfer, Bruno Lemaitre.
Abstract
UNLABELLED: Spiroplasma is a diverse bacterial clade that includes many vertically transmitted insect endosymbionts, including Spiroplasma poulsonii, a natural endosymbiont of Drosophila melanogaster. These bacteria persist in the hemolymph of their adult host and exhibit efficient vertical transmission from mother to offspring. In this study, we analyzed the mechanism that underlies their vertical transmission, and here we provide strong evidence that these bacteria use the yolk uptake machinery to colonize the germ line. We show that Spiroplasma reaches the oocyte by passing through the intercellular space surrounding the ovarian follicle cells and is then endocytosed into oocytes within yolk granules during the vitellogenic stages of oogenesis. Mutations that disrupt yolk uptake by oocytes inhibit vertical Spiroplasma transmission and lead to an accumulation of these bacteria outside the oocyte. Impairment of yolk secretion by the fat body results in Spiroplasma not reaching the oocyte and a severe reduction of vertical transmission. We propose a model in which Spiroplasma first interacts with yolk in the hemolymph to gain access to the oocyte and then uses the yolk receptor, Yolkless, to be endocytosed into the oocyte. Cooption of the yolk uptake machinery is a powerful strategy for endosymbionts to target the germ line and achieve vertical transmission. This mechanism may apply to other endosymbionts and provides a possible explanation for endosymbiont host specificity. IMPORTANCE: Most insect species, including important disease vectors and crop pests, harbor vertically transmitted endosymbiotic bacteria. Studies have shown that many facultative endosymbionts, including Spiroplasma, confer protection against different classes of parasites on their hosts and therefore are attractive tools for the control of vector-borne diseases. The ability to be efficiently transmitted from females to their offspring is the key feature shaping associations between insects and their inherited endosymbionts, but to date, little is known about the mechanisms involved. In oviparous animals, yolk accumulates in developing eggs and serves to meet the nutritional demands of embryonic development. Here we show that Spiroplasma coopts the yolk transport and uptake machinery to colonize the germ line and ensure efficient vertical transmission. The uptake of yolk is a female germ line-specific feature and therefore an attractive target for cooption by endosymbionts that need to maintain high-fidelity maternal transmission.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23462112 PMCID: PMC3585447 DOI: 10.1128/mBio.00532-12
Source DB: PubMed Journal: MBio Impact factor: 7.867
FIG 1 Spiroplasma colonization of the germ line. (A) Drawing showing the structure of an egg chamber, ovarioles. and ovary of Drosophila. The ovariole is surrounded by a muscular epithelium (light blue). Development of egg chambers progresses along the length of the ovariole, beginning with stem cell division in the germarium, which eventually becomes vitellogenic (accumulates yolk) and is termed the vitellarium, after which dumping of nurse cell contents into the oocyte occurs. Vitellogenic stage 10 egg chambers (left) are characterized by an outer layer of columnar follicle cells (green), an expanded oocyte (yellow), and nurse cells (blue). (B) Exterior surface of a vitellogenic stage 10 egg chamber. Spiroplasma bacteria are stained red (immunostaining with anti-Spiroplasma antibody), and cortical actin is stained green (with phalloidin), and this is the case for all subsequent images. (C) Spiroplasma localization in a series of egg chambers that represents the progression from germarium to vitellogenic oocytes. Germarium, stage 2, and stage 4, C1; stage 6, C2; stage 9, C3; stage 10, C4. (D) Actin staining of cell boundaries (D1) and Spiroplasma bacteria (D2) are merged (D3, D4) to show that Spiroplasma passes between follicle cells. D1 to D3 are transverse sections, and D4 is a longitudinal section. (E1) Bright-field image overlaid with fluorescent Spiroplasma staining reveals the localization of Spiroplasma bacteria in relation to yolk granules. In all of the fluorescence microscopy images, the scale bar represents 25 µm. (E2, E3) Electron micrograph showing localization of Spiroplasma bacteria (arrow) in relation to yolk granules (Y). In E1, Spiroplasma bacteria are contained between the yolk granule and the vesicular membrane. In E2, Spiroplasma bacteria can be seen partially penetrating the vesicular membrane. Spiroplasma cells could be identified in yolk granules on the basis of their size and morphology and the absence of such cells in yolk granules of flies without Spiroplasma bacteria.
FIG 2 Involvement of Yolkless receptor-mediated endocytosis in Spiroplasma transmission. (A) Spiroplasma levels in flies and embryos are shown for the control (OR) and yolkless (yl13) mutants. Spiroplasma levels were monitored by qPCR with a Spiroplasma-specific gene (dnaA). Each value was normalized to the average of the control values for that experiment (OR flies or embryos), which was set at 100%. All of the repeats from all of the experiments were then pooled. The number of samples collected independently for DNA extraction is shown by the value in each bar. Error bars represent the standard error of the mean. NS and *** denote levels of statistical significance in a Mann-Whitney U test of difference when yl13 mutants are compared to the control (OR) for flies (P = 0.6298) and for embryos laid by these flies (P < 0.0001). (B) Stage 10 oocytes from control (OR) (B1), yl13 (B2), and Rab52-deficient germ line clone (B3) flies. Note that Rab52-deficient clones exhibit structural deformations. The arrowhead in B2 denotes an accumulation of Spiroplasma bacteria between the follicle cells surrounding yl13 mutant oocytes. The arrowhead in B3 denotes actin-rich cortical invagination that is associated with the presence of Spiroplasma (see image analysis in Fig. S1 in the supplemental material). The images at the bottom are higher magnifications of the insets.
FIG 3 Yolk protein involvement in Spiroplasma transmission. (A1) Spiroplasma levels in flies are shown for the control (OR) and Yolk protein 1 (YP1/+). The qPCR data were normalized in a manner identical to that used for Fig. 2A. YP1/+ flies had significantly more Spiroplasma bacteria than their OR counterparts (P = 0.0017) (A2). Mean Spiroplasma levels in embryos are shown for the control (OR) and Yolk protein 1 (YP1/+). Embryos collected from YP1/+ flies had significantly fewer Spiroplasma bacteria than control embryos did (P < 0.0001). Error bars represent the standard error of the mean; the number of samples collected independently for DNA extraction is reflected by the value in each bar. ** and *** denote the levels of statistical significance in a Mann-Whitney U test. (B) Stage 10 oocytes from OR control (B1) and YP1/+ mutant (B2) flies. Note the lack of Spiroplasma bacteria in the follicle cell layer and the lower levels associated with the muscular epithelium in B2 (see image analysis in Fig. S1 in the supplemental material). The images at the bottom are higher magnifications of the insets.