| Literature DB >> 28705905 |
Gordon M Bennett1, Rebecca A Chong2.
Abstract
The agricultural pest known as the glassy-winged sharpshooter (GWSS) or Homalodisca vitripennis (Hemiptera: Cicadellidae) harbors two bacterial symbionts, "Candidatus Sulcia muelleri" and "Ca Baumannia cicadellinicola," which provide the 10 essential amino acids (EAAs) that are limited in the host plant-sap diet. Although they differ in origin and symbiotic age, both bacteria have experienced extensive genome degradation resulting from their ancient restriction to specialized host organs (bacteriomes) that provide cellular support and ensure vertical transmission. GWSS bacteriomes are of different origins and distinctly colored red and yellow. While Sulcia occupies the yellow bacteriome, Baumannia inhabits both. Aside from genomic predictions, little is currently known about the cellular functions of these bacterial symbionts, particularly whether Baumannia in different bacteriomes perform different roles in the symbiosis. To address these questions, we conducted a replicated, strand-specific RNA-seq experiment to assay global gene expression patterns in Sulcia and Baumannia Despite differences in genomic capabilities, the symbionts exhibit similar profiles of their most highly expressed genes, including those involved in nutrition synthesis and protein stability (chaperonins dnaK and groESL) that likely aid impaired proteins. Baumannia populations in separate bacteriomes differentially express genes enriched in essential nutrient synthesis, including EAAs (histidine and methionine) and B vitamins (biotin and thiamine). Patterns of differential gene expression further reveal complexity in methionine synthesis. Baumannia's capability to differentially express genes is unusual, as ancient symbionts lose the capability to independently regulate transcription. Combined with previous microscopy, our results suggest that the GWSS may rely on distinct Baumannia populations for essential nutrition and vertical transmission.Entities:
Keywords: bacteriomes; co-evolution; genomics; mutualism; obligate symbioses
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28705905 PMCID: PMC5592932 DOI: 10.1534/g3.117.044255
Source DB: PubMed Journal: G3 (Bethesda) ISSN: 2160-1836 Impact factor: 3.154
Figure 1Bacteriome organs of the glassy-winged sharpshooter (GWSS), Homalodisca vitripennis. Microscopy of a female GWSS (A and B) dissected to show whole bacteriome structures. Black scale bars indicate 1 mm. (C–F) Fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) results for the red bacteriome (tissue in upper half) and yellow bacteriome (tissue in lower half). Images are split by fluorescence channel to show (C) DNA counterstained in blue (i.e., host and bacterial DNA), (D) Sulcia in red, (E) Baumannia in green, and (F) a merged image of all three (C–E). Arrows in (D and E) show the red bacteriome tissues that exclusively contain Baumannia. White scale bar in (C–F) represents 100 μm.
Replicated RNA sequencing and bacterial symbiont mapping results for Homalodisca vitripennis bacteriomes
| Replicate | Bacteriome | Reads | Symbiont | Mapped | % of Reads |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rep 1 | Red | 24,733,585 | 19,783,309 | 80.33 | |
| 26,062 | 0.13 | ||||
| Yellow | 20,763,561 | 2,875,395 | 15.00 | ||
| 9,820,142 | 47.51 | ||||
| Rep 2 | Red | 23,033,014 | 18,586,145 | 83.94 | |
| 17,156 | 0.12 | ||||
| Yellow | 20,787,994 | 2,876,250 | 15.56 | ||
| 9,277,730 | 47.88 | ||||
| Rep 3 | Red | 22,935,642 | 16,197,931 | 72.40 | |
| 53,567 | 0.44 | ||||
| Yellow | 20,559,249 | 3,283,895 | 16.62 | ||
| 8,675,965 | 44.31 |
Figure 2Genome-wide gene expression profiles for (A) Baumannia and (B) Sulcia symbionts from the sharpshooter insect host, Homalodisca vitripennis (GWSS). Bar graphs show per gene TPM estimates for replicate 1 (see Table 1) of the yellow bacteriome. Inner rings and striations show the bacterial genomes and individual genes. Tick marks on the innermost ring show the locations of predicted noncoding RNAs. A selected set of the most highly expressed genes is labeled with gene shorthand names; not all genes discussed are labeled owing to space constraints. See Supplemental Material for complete TPM values (Table S1) and stranded expression counts (Figure S1).
Figure 3Clusters of orthologous genes (COG) enrichment for each fold change threshold (FCT) of differentially expressed Baumannia genes (see inset legend). COG categories are as follows: A, RNA processing and modification; B, chromatin structure and dynamics; C, energy production and conversion; D, cell cycle control and mitosis; E, amino acid metabolism and transport; F, nucleotide metabolism and transport; G, carbohydrate metabolism and transport; H, coenzyme metabolism; I, lipid metabolism; J, translation; K, transcription; L, replication and repair; M, cell wall/membrane/envelop biogenesis; N, cell motility; O, post-translational modification, protein turnover, and chaperone functions; P, inorganic ion transport and metabolism; Q, secondary structure; T, signal transduction; U, intracellular trafficking and secretion; Y, nuclear structure; Z, cytoskeleton; R, general functional prediction only; S, unknown (Tatusov ).
Figure 4Differential gene expression values of Baumannia genes between bacteriome tissue types related to nutrition synthesis pathways: (A) histidine, (B) biotin, (C) thiamine, and (D) methionine (see Figure 1). Individual genes are represented by arrow-shaped polygons with gene names above. Intermediate metabolites are shown for some pathways and abbreviated (see legend). Genes with solid borders are significantly differentially expressed at a log2 fold change threshold (FCT) of 1.0 (>2× fold change). Genes with dashed borders show moderate significant differential expression at FCT = 0.5. Genes with white borders and hash marks are not significantly differentially expressed. Genes shown in shades of blue are more highly expressed in the red bacteriome, and genes shown in red are more highly expressed in the yellow bacteriome (see legend).