Nejvíce citovaný článek - PubMed ID 37876035
Predicting Blomia tropicalis allergens using a multiomics approach
UNLABELLED: We investigated the tripartite interactions between two intracellular bacterial symbionts, Cardinium and Wolbachia in Tyrophagus putrescentiae. Cultures of Tyrophagus putrescentiae are typically single-infected by one intracellular symbiont. However, co-infection can be experimentally induced by mixing single-infected cultures, resulting in 10% of mite individuals being double-infected (Cardinium + Wolbachia) and a corresponding reduction in host fitness. Here, we assembled the genomes of Cardinium and Wolbachia and analyzed their gene expression in parental single-infected and mixed mite cultures using population-level samples (ranging from 7,500 to 10,000 mites). Wolbachia interacts more extensively with its mite host than Cardinium in single-infected cultures. However, in mixed cultures, (i) Wolbachia exhibited reduced regulation of the host compared with Cardinium; (ii) the gene expression profile of Cardinium shifted, increasing its interactions with the host, whereas the gene expression profile of Wolbachia remained unchanged; and (iii) Wolbachia genes exhibited a loss of interactions with mite gene expression, as indicated by reduced correlations (for example with host MAPK, endocytosis, and calcium signaling pathways). The experiments show that at the mite population level, symbiont infection disrupts gene expression interaction between the two symbionts and their host in different ways. Wolbachia was more influenced by Cardinium gene expression than vice versa. Cardinium can inhibit the growth of Wolbachia by disrupting its interaction with the host, leading to a loss of Wolbachia's influence on mite immune and regulatory pathways. The reasons for responses are due to co-infection or the reduced frequency of Wolbachia single-infected individuals due to the analyses of population-level samples. IMPORTANCE: We found that Cardinium disrupts the interaction between Wolbachia and mite host. In Wolbachia single-infected cultures, strong correlations exist between symbiont and host gene expressions. Interestingly, although Cardinium can also interact with the host, this interaction appears weaker compared with Wolbachia in single-infected cultures. These results suggest that both symbionts affect mite host gene expression, particularly in immune and regulatory pathways. In mixed samples, Cardinium appears to outcompete Wolbachia by disrupting its host interaction. It indicates competition between these two intracellular symbionts in mite populations. Wolbachia belongs to a mite-specific supergroup Q, distinct from the more commonly studied Wolbachia supergroups. As these mite-specific bacteria exhibit pathogen-blocking effects, our findings may have relevance for other systems, such as ticks and tick-borne diseases. The study sheds light on intracellular symbiont interaction within a novel mite-symbiont model.
- Klíčová slova
- Cardinium, Wolbachia, gene expression, genome, interaction, mite,
- MeSH
- Bacteroidetes * fyziologie genetika MeSH
- roztoči * mikrobiologie MeSH
- symbióza MeSH
- Wolbachia * genetika fyziologie MeSH
- zvířata MeSH
- Check Tag
- zvířata MeSH
- Publikační typ
- časopisecké články MeSH
We examined host and bacterial gene expression profiles in the stored product mite Tyrophagus putrescentiae co-infected with Wolbachia (wTPut) and Cardinium (cTPut) while varying the presence of the Erwiniaceae symbiont (SLS). SLS, a novel symbiont in the family Erwiniaceae, with a genome size of 1.7 Mb, is found in 16% of mite species in infected cultures. In addition, SLS was detected in mite feces but not in their eggs. Although Wolbachia expression remained unchanged, the presence or absence of SLS significantly affected Cardinium expression. It indicated that the effect of Wolbachia on SLS was neutral. In SLS-positive samples, Cardinium exhibited 29 upregulated and 48 downregulated genes compared to SLS-negative samples. Furthermore, Cardinium gene expression strongly correlated with mite KEGG gene expression in SLS-positive samples. Positive Spearman's correlations between Cardinium gene expression and mite KEGG immune and regulatory pathways were doubled in SLS-positive compared to SLS-negative samples. The diversity of expressed genes in the mite host decreased in the presence of SLS. Cardinium had more interacting genes to mite host in SLS-positive samples than without SLS. Transposases are the most affected Cardinium genes, showing upregulation in the presence of SLS. Correlation analyses revealed interactions between Cardinium and SLS via mite immune and regulatory pathways, including lysosome, ubiquitin-mediated proteolysis, PIK3_Akt, and cGMP-PKG. The results showed that Cardinium indirectly affects the gut symbionts of mites.IMPORTANCEThis study introduces a new model to analyze interactions between intracellular bacterial symbionts, gut bacterial symbionts, and their mite hosts. Using gene expression correlations, we investigated how the intracellular Cardinium responds to the novel Erwiniaceae gut symbiont in the mold mite Tyrophagus putrescentiae. The data showed that both mite and Cardinium gene expression are different in the samples with and without Erwiniaceae symbionts. In the presence of Erwiniaceae symbionts, Cardinium increased the interaction with the mite host in terms of changes in gene expression. The mite immune and regulatory pathway gene expression is differently correlated to Cardinium genes in relation to Erwiniaceae symbionts. As a well-known producer of allergens, T. putrescentiae physiology and thus its allergen production are influenced by both symbionts, potentially affecting the release of allergens into human environments.
- Klíčová slova
- Cardinium, Erwiniaceae, Sodalis, Tyrophagus putrescentiae, Wolbachia, allergens, bacterial symbionts, gene expression, stored product mite,
- MeSH
- Acaridae * mikrobiologie MeSH
- Bacteroidetes * genetika fyziologie MeSH
- regulace genové exprese u bakterií * MeSH
- roztoči * mikrobiologie MeSH
- střevní mikroflóra * MeSH
- symbióza * MeSH
- Wolbachia genetika fyziologie MeSH
- zvířata MeSH
- Check Tag
- zvířata MeSH
- Publikační typ
- časopisecké články MeSH
A novel Bartonella-like symbiont (BLS) of Tyrophagus putrescentiae was characterized. BLS formed a separate cluster from the Bartonella clade together with an ant symbiont. BLS was present in mite bodies (103 16S DNA copies/mite) and feces but was absent in eggs. This indicated the presence of the BLS in mite guts. The BLS showed a reduction in genome size (1.6 Mb) and indicates gene loss compared to Bartonella apis. The BLS can be interacted with its host by using host metabolic pathways (e.g., the histidine and arginine metabolic pathways) as well as by providing its own metabolic pathways (pantothenate and lipoic acid) to the host, suggesting the existence of a mutualistic association. Our experimental data further confirmed these potential mutualistic nutritional associations, as cultures of T. putrescentiae with low BLS abundance showed the strongest response after the addition of vitamins. Despite developing an arguably tight dependency on its host, the BLS has probably retained flagellar mobility, as evidenced by the 32 proteins enriched in KEGG pathways associated with flagellar assembly or chemotaxis (e.g., fliC, flgE, and flgK, as highly expressed genes). Some of these proteins probably also facilitate adhesion to host gut cells. The microcin C transporter was identified in the BLS, suggesting that microcin C may be used in competition with other gut bacteria. The 16S DNA sequence comparison indicated a mite clade of BLSs with a broad host range, including house dust and stored-product mites. Our phylogenomic analyses identified a unique lineage of arachnid specific BLSs in mites and scorpions.IMPORTANCEA Bartonella-like symbiont was found in an astigmatid mite of allergenic importance. We assembled the genome of the bacterium from metagenomes of different stored-product mite (T. putrescentiae) cultures. The bacterium provides pantothenate and lipoic acid to the mite host. The vitamin supply explains the changes in the relative abundance of BLSs in T. putrescentiae as the microbiome response to nutritional or pesticide stress, as observed previously. The phylogenomic analyses of available 16S DNA sequences originating from mite, scorpion, and insect samples identified a unique lineage of arachnid specific forming large Bartonella clade. BLSs associated with mites and a scorpion. The Bartonella clade included the previously described Ca. Tokpelaia symbionts of ants.
- Klíčová slova
- Bartonella, ants, house dust, mite, nutrition, stored-product, symbionts, vitamin,
- MeSH
- Acaridae * mikrobiologie MeSH
- alergeny MeSH
- Bacteria MeSH
- Bartonella * genetika MeSH
- kyselina lipoová * MeSH
- roztoči * genetika MeSH
- symbióza MeSH
- zvířata MeSH
- Check Tag
- zvířata MeSH
- Publikační typ
- časopisecké články MeSH
- Názvy látek
- alergeny MeSH
- kyselina lipoová * MeSH
Blomia tropicalis is an allergen-producing mite in the human environment in tropical regions. The microbiome of B. tropicalis was described using the barcode sequencing region of V4 16S rDNA and genome assemblage. Mixta mediterraneensis, previously isolated from human skin swabs, was identified as a B. tropicalis gut symbiont based on genome assembly. The microbiome contains two bacteria, Staphylococcus and M. mediterraneensis. The number of M. mediterraneensis 16S DNA copies was 106 per mite and 109 per feces in the rearing chamber based on qPCR quantification. The profile of this bacterium reached 50% of reads in the mite gut and feces. Genomic analyses revealed that the bacterium has several metabolic pathways that suggest metabolic cooperation with the mite host in vitamin and amino acid synthesis, nitrogen recycling, and antimicrobial defense. Lysozyme is present in the symbiotic bacterium but absent in the mite. The B. tropicalis microbiome contained Staphylococcus, which accelerates mite population growth. Mites can digest Staphylococcus by using specific enzymes with hydrolytic functions against bacterial cell walls (chitinases and cathepsin D), leading to endocytosis of bacteria and their degradation in lysosomes and phagosomes. Gene expression analysis of B. tropicalis indicated that phagocytosis was mediated by the PI3-kinase/Akt pathway interacting with the invasins produced by M. mediterraneensis. Moreover, the symbiont had metabolic pathways that allowed it to recycle the mite metabolic waste product guanine, known as a mite attractant. The mite host symbiont enhances mite aggregation in the feces, and the fecal-oral transmission route is excepted.