The "Other" Rickettsiales : an Overview of the Family " Candidatus Midichloriaceae"

The family " Midichloriaceae" constitutes the most diverse but least studied lineage within the important order of intracellular bacteria . " Midichloriaceae" endosymbionts are found in many hosts, including terrestrial arthropods, aquatic invertebrates, and protists. Representat...

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Veröffentlicht in:Applied and environmental microbiology 2022-03, Vol.88 (6), p.e0243221-e0243221
Hauptverfasser: Giannotti, Daniele, Boscaro, Vittorio, Husnik, Filip, Vannini, Claudia, Keeling, Patrick J
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The family " Midichloriaceae" constitutes the most diverse but least studied lineage within the important order of intracellular bacteria . " Midichloriaceae" endosymbionts are found in many hosts, including terrestrial arthropods, aquatic invertebrates, and protists. Representatives of the family are not documented to be pathogenic, but some are associated with diseased fish or corals. Different genera display a range of unusual features, such as full sets of flagellar genes without visible flagella or the ability to invade host mitochondria. Since studies on " Midichloriaceae" tend to focus on the host, the family is rarely addressed as a unit, and we therefore lack a coherent picture of its diversity. Here, we provide four new midichloriaceae genomes, and we survey molecular and ecological data from the entire family. Features like genome size, ecological context, and host transitions vary considerably even among closely related midichloriaceae, suggesting a high frequency of such shifts, incomplete sampling, or both. Important functional traits involved in energy metabolism, flagella, and secretion systems were independently reduced multiple times with no obvious correspondence to host or habitat, corroborating the idea that many features of these "professional symbionts" are largely independent of host identity. Finally, despite " Midichloriaceae" being predominantly studied in ticks, our analyses show that the clade is mainly aquatic, with a few terrestrial offshoots. This highlights the importance of considering aquatic hosts, and protists in particular, when reconstructing the evolution of these endosymbionts and by extension all . Among endosymbiotic bacterial lineages, few are as intensely studied as , which include the causative agents of spotted fever, typhus, and anaplasmosis. However, an important subgroup called " Midichloriaceae" receives little attention despite accounting for a third of the diversity of and harboring a wide range of bacteria with unique features, like the ability to infect mitochondria. Midichloriaceae are found in many hosts, from ticks to corals to unicellular protozoa, and studies on them tend to focus on the host groups. Here, for the first time since the establishment of this clade, we address the genomics, evolution, and ecology of " Midichloriaceae" as a whole, highlighting trends and patterns, the remaining gaps in our knowledge, and its importance for the understanding of symbiotic processes in intracellular bact
ISSN:0099-2240
1098-5336
DOI:10.1128/aem.02432-21