4.2 Article

The diversity, recombination and horizontal transmission of Wolbachia in spiders in China

Journal

JOURNAL OF ASIA-PACIFIC ENTOMOLOGY
Volume 24, Issue 3, Pages 940-947

Publisher

KOREAN SOC APPLIED ENTOMOLOGY
DOI: 10.1016/j.aspen.2021.08.003

Keywords

Wolbachia; Spiders; Multilocus sequence typing; Recombination; Horizontal transmission

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31400550, 31772423]
  2. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2016YFE0128200]

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The study discovered a high diversity of Wolbachia strains in spiders from China, with group A being more common than group B, indicating the diversity of Wolbachia in spiders. Furthermore, the phylogenetic incongruence between Wolbachia and spiders suggested the importance of horizontal transmission in their spread.
Wolbachia are maternally inherited endosymbiotic bacteria. These intracellular bacteria are common in arthropods and could manipulate host reproduction in diverse ways, such as feminization, parthenogenesis, male killing and cytoplasmic incompatibility. In spiders, infection by Wolbachia has been found in a total of 99 species belonging to 62 genera and 17 families. Furthermore, recent studies analyzed the phylogeny of Wolbachia in Hylyphantes graminicola, 2 cave spiders and Agelenopsis species using multilocus sequence typing (MLST) approach. However, the diversity of Wolbachia strains determined by MLST in spiders from China is still largely unknown. In this study, we collected 1153 spider individuals from Mangshan in China and screened for Wolbachia in 975 individuals representing 68 spider species belonging to 45 genera of 16 families. We analyzed the phylogenetic relationship between Wolbachia and their host spiders by MLST approach. We found novel infections of Wolbachia in 1 family, 9 genera and 20 species of spiders. We found 13 new Wolbachia strains and suggest that group A is more common than group B in Wolbachia that infect spiders. Our results revealed three recombination events of the concatenated multilocus sequences in Wolbachia that infect spiders. Furthermore, our results demonstrated the phylogenetic incongruence between Wolbachia and spiders, suggesting the horizontal transmission of Wolbachia in spiders. We suggest that recombination and horizontal transmission may play an important role in the diversity and evolution of Wolbachia in spiders.

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