4.9 Article

Male-killing toxin in a bacterial symbiont of Drosophila

Journal

NATURE
Volume 557, Issue 7704, Pages 252-+

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-018-0086-2

Keywords

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Funding

  1. European Research Council (ERC) [339970]
  2. Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF) Sinergia Grant [CRSII3_154396]
  3. Loterie Romande through the Fondation pour la Recherche en Medecine Genetique

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Several lineages of symbiotic bacteria in insects selfishly manipulate host reproduction to spread in a population(1), often by distorting host sex ratios. Spiroplasma poulsonii(2,3) is a helical and motile, Gram-positive symbiotic bacterium that resides in a wide range of Drosophila species(4). A notable feature of S. poulsonii is male killing, whereby the sons of infected female hosts are selectively killed during development(1,2). Although male killing caused by S. poulsonii has been studied since the 1950s, its underlying mechanism is unknown. Here we identify an S. poulsonii protein, designated Spaid, whose expression induces male killing. Overexpression of Spaid in D. melanogaster kills males but not females, and induces massive apoptosis and neural defects, recapitulating the pathology observed in S. poulsonii-infected male embryos(5-11). Our data suggest that Spaid targets the dosage compensation machinery on the male X chromosome to mediate its effects. Spaid contains ankyrin repeats and a deubiquitinase domain, which are required for its subcellular localization and activity. Moreover, we found a laboratory mutant strain of S. poulsonii with reduced male-killing ability and a large deletion in the spaid locus. Our study has uncovered a bacterial protein that affects host cellular machinery in a sex-specific way, which is likely to be the long-searched-for factor responsible for S. poulsonii-induced male killing.

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