Microbial symbionts played a central role in insect evolution.Oreinacacaliae(Schrank, 1785) (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae) is a rare example of a viviparous insect, able to feed on toxic plants and sequester toxic compounds. In the current study, the microbiota associated withO.cacaliae was characterized using a culture-independent approach, targeting the 16S rRNA bacterial gene. The obtained 16S rRNA gene sequences were analyzed and identiÞed at different taxonomic levels. Wolbachiawas the dominant bacterium, both in male and female (100 and 91.9%, respectively) individuals; the detected Wolbachiawas described as a new sequence type based on multilocus sequence typing ( WolbachiaST375 Ocac_A_wVdO). After phylogenetic analyses, WolbachiaST375 Ocac_A_wVdO was attributed to the supergroup A. Immunoßuorescence assays and electron mi-croscopy conÞrmed the presence ofWolbachiawithin O.cacaliaeoocytes, conÞrming its transovarial transmission in this species. Representatives of six species of Oreina were tested for the presence of Wolbachiathrough speciÞc polymerase chain reaction, and a dendrogram was generated for these species based on coxI gene sequences. The Wolbachiaharbored by different species of Oreina were characterized by multilocus sequence typing. Five out of the six examined Oreina species were positive for Wolbachia, with four of these harboring the same sequence type.
A new strain of wolbachia in an alpine population of the viviparous oreina cacaliae (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae) / Montagna, Matteo; Chouaia, Bessem; Sacchi, Luciano; Porretta, Daniele; Martin, Elena; Giorgi, Annamaria; Lozzia, Giuseppe Carlo; Epis, Sara. - In: ENVIRONMENTAL ENTOMOLOGY. - ISSN 0046-225X. - STAMPA. - 43:4(2014), pp. 913-922. [10.1603/EN13228]
A new strain of wolbachia in an alpine population of the viviparous oreina cacaliae (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae)
PORRETTA, DANIELE;
2014
Abstract
Microbial symbionts played a central role in insect evolution.Oreinacacaliae(Schrank, 1785) (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae) is a rare example of a viviparous insect, able to feed on toxic plants and sequester toxic compounds. In the current study, the microbiota associated withO.cacaliae was characterized using a culture-independent approach, targeting the 16S rRNA bacterial gene. The obtained 16S rRNA gene sequences were analyzed and identiÞed at different taxonomic levels. Wolbachiawas the dominant bacterium, both in male and female (100 and 91.9%, respectively) individuals; the detected Wolbachiawas described as a new sequence type based on multilocus sequence typing ( WolbachiaST375 Ocac_A_wVdO). After phylogenetic analyses, WolbachiaST375 Ocac_A_wVdO was attributed to the supergroup A. Immunoßuorescence assays and electron mi-croscopy conÞrmed the presence ofWolbachiawithin O.cacaliaeoocytes, conÞrming its transovarial transmission in this species. Representatives of six species of Oreina were tested for the presence of Wolbachiathrough speciÞc polymerase chain reaction, and a dendrogram was generated for these species based on coxI gene sequences. The Wolbachiaharbored by different species of Oreina were characterized by multilocus sequence typing. Five out of the six examined Oreina species were positive for Wolbachia, with four of these harboring the same sequence type.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.