4.7 Editorial Material

Symbionts on the Brain: How Wolbachia Is Strictly Corralled in Some Neotropical Drosophila spp.

Journal

MBIO
Volume 13, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/mbio.01182-22

Keywords

autophagy; endoplasmic reticulum; neuroblast; symbiosis

Categories

Funding

  1. Division of Intramural Research, NIAID, NIH

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This study compared the development of Drosophila species with systemic or restricted infections and found that the restricted pattern is determined by an autophagic process, which has important implications for evolution and control of Wolbachia infections.
Wolbachia is a heritable alphaproteobacterial symbiont of arthropods and nematodes, famous for its repertoire of host manipulations, including cytoplasmic incompatibility. To be vertically transmitted, Wolbachia must efficiently colonize the female germ line, although somatic tissues outside the gonads are also infected. In Drosophila spp., Wolbachia is usually distributed systemically in multiple regions of the adult fly, but in some neotropical hosts, Wolbachia's only somatic niches are cerebral bacteriocyte-like structures and the ovarian follicle cells. In their recent article, Strunov and colleagues (A. Strunov, K. Schmidt, M. Kapun, and W. J. Miller. mBio 13:e03863-21, 2022, https://doi.org/10.1128/mbio.03863-21) compared the development of Drosophila spp. with systemic or restricted infections and demonstrated that the restricted pattern is determined in early embryogenesis by an apparently novel autophagic process, involving intimate interactions of Wolbachia with the endoplasmic reticulum. This work has implications not only for the evolution of neotropical Drosophila spp. but also for our understanding of how Wolbachia infections are controlled in other native or artificial hosts.

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