Litcius/Paper detail

A diversity of endosymbionts across Australian aphids and their persistence in aphid cultures

Qiong Yang, Alex Gill, Katie L. Robinson, Paul A. Umina, Perran A. Ross, Dongwu Zhan, Courtney Brown, Nicholas Bell, Ashley MacMahon, Ary A. Hoffmann

2023Environmental Microbiology22 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

There is increasing interest in the use of endosymbionts in pest control, which will benefit from the identification of endosymbionts from potential donor species for transfer to pest species. Here, we screened for endosymbionts in 123 Australian aphid samples across 32 species using 16S DNA metabarcoding. We then developed a qPCR method to validate the metabarcoding data set and to monitor endosymbiont persistence in aphid cultures. Pea aphids (Acyrthosiphon pisum) were frequently coinfected with Rickettsiella and Serratia, and glasshouse potato aphids (Aulacorthum solani) were coinfected with Regiella and Spiroplasma; other secondary endosymbionts detected in samples occurred by themselves. Hamiltonella, Rickettsia and Wolbachia were restricted to a single aphid species, whereas Regiella was found in multiple species. Rickettsiella, Hamiltonella and Serratia were stably maintained in laboratory cultures, although others were lost rapidly. The overall incidence of secondary endosymbionts in Australian samples tended to be lower than recorded from aphids overseas. These results indicate that aphid endosymbionts probably exhibit different levels of infectivity and vertical transmission efficiency across hosts, which may contribute to natural infection patterns. The rapid loss of some endosymbionts in cultures raises questions about factors that maintain them under field conditions, while endosymbionts that persisted in laboratory culture provide candidates for interspecific transfers.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyAcyrthosiphon pisumAphidWolbachiaBuchneraHost (biology)PEST analysisLeafhopperSpiroplasmaAphisBotanyZoologyEcologyAphididaeHemipteraHomopteraSymbiosisBacteriaMollicutesGeneticsInsect symbiosis and bacterial influencesCocoa and Sweet Potato AgronomyInsect-Plant Interactions and Control