An Interdependent Metabolic Patchwork in the Nested Symbiosis of Mealybugs
0303 health sciences
Agricultural and Biological Sciences(all)
Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology(all)
Molecular Sequence Data
Betaproteobacteria
Gene Expression
Hemiptera
03 medical and health sciences
Animals
Symbiosis
Gammaproteobacteria
Genome, Bacterial
Metabolic Networks and Pathways
DOI:
10.1016/j.cub.2011.06.051
Publication Date:
2011-08-15T11:34:31Z
AUTHORS (2)
ABSTRACT
Highly reduced genomes of 144-416 kilobases have been described from nutrient-provisioning bacterial symbionts of several insect lineages [1-5]. Some host insects have formed stable associations with pairs of bacterial symbionts that live in specialized cells and provide them with essential nutrients; genomic data from these systems have revealed remarkable levels of metabolic complementarity between the symbiont pairs [3, 4, 6, 7]. The mealybug Planococcus citri (Hemiptera: Pseudococcidae) contains dual bacterial symbionts existing with an unprecedented organization: an unnamed gammaproteobacteria, for which we propose the name Candidatus Moranella endobia, lives inside the betaproteobacteria Candidatus Tremblaya princeps [8]. Here we describe the complete genomes and metabolic contributions of these unusual nested symbionts. We show that whereas there is little overlap in retained genes involved in nutrient production between symbionts, several essential amino acid pathways in the mealybug assemblage require a patchwork of interspersed gene products from Tremblaya, Moranella, and possibly P. citri. Furthermore, although Tremblaya has the smallest cellular genome yet described, it contains a genomic inversion present in both orientations in individual insects, starkly contrasting with the extreme structural stability typical of highly reduced bacterial genomes [4, 9, 10].
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