Title
Candidatus dactylopiibacterium carminicum, a nitrogen-fixing symbiont of Dactylopius cochineal insects (Hemiptera: Coccoidea: Dactylopiidae)
Date Issued
01 September 2017
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
De León A.V.P.
Ramírez-Puebla S.T.
Rosenblueth M.
Esposti M.D.
Martínez-Romero J.
Martínez-Romero E.
Publisher(s)
Oxford University Press
Abstract
The domesticated carmine cochineal Dactylopius coccus (scale insect) has commercial value and has been used for more than 500 years for natural red pigment production. Besides the domesticated cochineal, other wild Dactylopius species such as Dactylopius opuntiae are found in the Americas, all feeding on nutrient poor sap from native cacti. To compensate nutritional deficiencies, many insects harbor symbiotic bacteria which provide essential amino acids or vitamins to their hosts. Here, we characterized a symbiont from the carmine cochineal insects, Candidatus Dactylopiibacterium carminicum (betaproteobacte-rium, Rhodocyclaceae family) and found it in D. Coccus and in D. opuntiae ovaries by fluorescent in situ hybridization, suggesting maternal inheritance. Bacterial genomes recovered from metagenomic data derived from whole insects or tissues both from D. Coccus and from D. opuntiae were around 3.6 Mb in size. Phylogenomics showed that dactylopiibacteria con-stitutedaclosely relatedclade neighbortonitrogenfixing bacteria from soilorfrom various plants includingrice and other grass endophytes. Metabolic capabilities were inferred from genomic analyses, showing a complete operon for nitrogen fixation, biosynthesis of amino acids and vitamins and putative traits of anaerobic or microoxic metabolism as well as genes for plant interaction. Dactylopiibacterium nif gene expression and acetylene reduction activity detecting nitrogen fixation were evidenced in D. Coccus hemolymph and ovaries, in congruence with the endosymbiont fluorescent in situ hybridization location. Dactylopiibacterium symbionts may compensate for the nitrogen deficiency in the cochineal diet. In addition, this symbiont may provide essential amino acids, recycle uric acid, and increase the cochineal life span.
Start page
2237
End page
2250
Volume
9
Issue
9
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Ciencia veterinaria
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85044545341
PubMed ID
Source
Genome Biology and Evolution
Sponsor(s)
The authors thank CONACyT Basic Science (grant 253116) and PAPIIT-UNAM (IN207615). They also thank Pilar González-Román for help with dissections; María J. Palma-Martínez for help with RT-PCR; Arturo Ramírez Cruz for his discussions on microscopy from cochineal ovaries; José Luis Marquina for providing D. coccus; and Alejandro Sánchez-Flores, Víctor del Moral, Alfredo Hernández and Romualdo Zayas for bioinformatics and computing support. All bioinfor-matic analyses were performed on CCG-UNAM servers. The authors thank CONACyT Basic Science (grant 253116) and PAPIIT-UNAM (IN207615). They also thank Pilar González-Román for help with dissections; María J. Palma-Martínez for help with RT-PCR; Arturo Ramírez Cruz for his discussions on microscopy from cochineal ovaries; José Luis Marquina for providing D. Coccus; and Alejandro Sánchez-Flores, Víctor del Moral, Alfredo Hernández and Romualdo Zayas for bioinformatics and computing support. All bioinfor-matic analyses were performed on CCG-UNAM servers.
Sources of information: Directorio de Producción Científica Scopus