4.6 Article Proceedings Paper

Host-symbiont stability and fast evolutionary rates in an ant-bacterium association:: Cospeciation of Camponotus species and their endosymbionts, Candidatus Blochmannia

Journal

SYSTEMATIC BIOLOGY
Volume 53, Issue 1, Pages 95-110

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1080/10635150490264842

Keywords

Blochmannia; Camponotus; cospeciation; endosymbiosis; molecular clock; phylogenetics

Funding

  1. NIGMS NIH HHS [R01 GM62626-01] Funding Source: Medline

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Bacterial endosymbionts are widespread across several insect orders and are involved in interactions ranging from obligate mutualism to reproductive parasitism. Candidatus Blochmannia gen. nov. ( Blochmannia) is an obligate bacterial associate of Camponotus and related ant genera ( Hymenoptera: Formicidae). The occurrence of Blochmannia in all Camponotus species sampled from field populations and its maternal transmission to host offspring suggest that this bacterium is engaged in a long-term, stable association with its ant hosts. However, evidence for cospeciation in this system is equivocal because previous phylogenetic studies were based on limited gene sampling, lacked statistical analysis of congruence, and have even suggested host switching. We compared phylogenies of host genes ( the nuclear EF-1alphaF2 and mitochondrial COI/II) and Blochmannia genes (16S ribosomalDNA[ rDNA], groEL, gidA, and rpsB), totaling more than 7 kilobases for each of 16 Camponotus species. Each data set was analyzed using maximum likelihood and Bayesian phylogenetic reconstruction methods. We found minimal conflict among host and symbiont phylogenies, and the few areas of discordance occurred at deep nodes that were poorly supported by individual data sets. Concatenated protein-coding genes produced a very well-resolved tree that, based on the Shimodaira - Hasegawa test, did not conflict with any host or symbiont data set. Correlated rates of synonymous substitution (d(S)) along corresponding branches of host and symbiont phylogenies further supported the hypothesis of cospeciation. These findings indicate that Blochmannia - Camponotus symbiosis has been evolutionarily stable throughout tens of millions of years. Based on inferred divergence times among the ant hosts, we estimated rates of sequence evolution of Blochmannia to be similar to0.0024 substitutions per site per million years (s/s/MY) for the 16S rDNA gene and similar to 0.1094 s/s/MY at synonymous positions of the genes sampled. These rates are several-fold higher than those for related bacteria Buchnera aphidicola and Escherichia coli. Phylogenetic congruence among Blochmannia genes indicates genome stability that typifies primary endosymbionts of insects.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available