Data from: Multiple endosymbiont infections and reproductive manipulations in a linyphiid spider population
In many arthropods, maternally inherited endosymbiotic bacteria can increase infection frequency by manipulating host reproduction. Multiple infections of different bacteria in a single host population are common, yet few studies have documented concurrent endosymbiont phenotypes or explored their p...
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Zusammenfassung: | In many arthropods, maternally inherited endosymbiotic bacteria can
increase infection frequency by manipulating host reproduction. Multiple
infections of different bacteria in a single host population are common,
yet few studies have documented concurrent endosymbiont phenotypes or
explored their potential interactions. We hypothesized that spiders might
be a particularly useful taxon for investigating endosymbiont
interactions, because they are host to a plethora of endosymbiotic
bacteria and frequently exhibit multiple infections. We established two
matrilines from the same population of the linyphiid spider Mermessus
fradeorum and then used antibiotic curing and controlled mating assays to
demonstrate that each matriline was subject to a distinct endosymbiotic
reproductive manipulation. One matriline was co-infected with Rickettsia
and Wolbachia and produced offspring with a radical female bias.
Antibiotic treatment eliminated both endosymbionts and restored an even
sex ratio to subsequent generations. Chromosomal and fecundity
observations suggest a feminization mechanism. In the other matriline, a
separate factorial mating assay of cured and infected spiders demonstrated
strong cytoplasmic incompatibility (CI) induced by a different strain of
Wolbachia. However, males with this Wolbachia induced only mild CI when
mated with the Rickettsia–Wolbachia females. In a subsequent survey of a
field population of M. fradeorum, we detected these same three
endosymbionts infecting 55% of the spiders in almost all possible
combinations, with nearly half of the infected spiders exhibiting multiple
infection. Our results suggest that a dynamic network of endosymbionts may
interact both within multiply infected hosts and within a population
subject to multiple strong reproductive manipulations. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.935hp |