Credit: Dennis Kunkel, Sarah Bordenstein and Robert Brucker
WOODS HOLE, Mass. — Controlling mosquito-borne illnesses, such as Dengue or West Nile virus, has historically been difficult due to a lack of effective vaccines and concerns about the environmental impact of insecticides. Thus, scientists have turned to manipulating Wolbachia, a parasitic bacterium within mosquitoes, as a way to control the reproductive fitness of mosquito populations that transmit human disease.
In a new study in Nature Communications, an international team including scientists from the Marine Biological Laboratory (MBL) and the University of Chicago identified a new mobile DNA element in Wolbachia, which may contribute to improved control strategies for mosquito vectors of disease.
Led by Julie Reveillaud of INRA, France, and Sarah Bordenstein of Vanderbilt University, the researchers reconstructed near-complete genomes of Wolbachia isolated from individual ovaries of four Culex pipiens mosquitoes. In the process, they identified a novel plasmid — a circular piece of DNA that can replicate independently of the chromosomes. A plasmid is a mobile DNA element, meaning it can transfer from one cell to another and can have great implications for the fitness and evolution of a microbial species. Due to the ability of mobile genetic elements to spread through different Wolbachia cells, and thus across a Wolbachia population, they hold promise for controlling mosquito populations that may carry disease.
“Our data show that this novel plasmid is widespread across natural Wolbachia populations that infect C. pipiens mosquitoes throughout the world, which implies it has an essential role. The idea that it may enable transformation of the Wolbachia populations is simply very exciting,” says the senior author of the study, A. Murat Eren (Meren), an assistant professor of medicine at the University of Chicago and an MBL Fellow.
Wolbachia is transmitted from mother to offspring and can influence the reproductive behavior of its mosquito host. Wolbachia can modify sperm so if an infected male mates with an uninfected female, or with one that carries a different strain of Wolbachia, embryos cannot develop. The mechanism behind this embryonic killing lies within another mobile genetic element in the Wolbachia genome.
“Wolbachia populations do not lend themselves to direct genetic modification. While a natural plasmid sounds very promising to bypass those limitations, we do not yet have any evidence to suggest the possibility or efficacy of any transformation through this plasmid,” Meren says. “We just discovered its existence, and the time will tell how useful it is.”
“Other exciting questions for which we do not have yet clear answers include whether there is an ancestral relationship between the plasmid and other mobile genetic elements of Wolbachia, and whether these interact or not,” adds Reveillaud.
This collaboration began at MBL in 2011, when Meren and Reveillaud brought their computational and molecular evolution backgrounds together to explore questions in microbial ecology in the MBL’s Bay Paul Center. (See Reveillaud’s blog post about the collaboration.) Years later, they began examining Wolbachia genomic diversity by focusing on individual mosquitoes captured in the wild, rather than using laboratory mosquito strains. With the help of former MBL scientists Sarah Bordenstein and Seth Bordenstein of Vanderbilt University, who have expertise in Wolbachia, they began unraveling the intricacies of the Wolbachia genome.
“Wolbachia is particularly difficult to study because, unlike free-living bacteria, it cannot be cultured in cell-free media. Through this interdisciplinary collaboration, we were able to tease apart the genomes of the mosquito host, Wolbachia, and its mobile elements,” says Sarah Bordenstein.
While fragments of this novel plasmid had appeared in previous Wolbachia sequencing studies, these fragments had never been assembled into a complete circular piece and its extrachromosomal nature was not recognized, most likely due to computational limitations. The team was able to overcome these limitations by employing a combination of cutting-edge strategies, such as genome-resolved metagenomics and long-read sequencing.
“The key bioinformatics platform that enabled us to study mosquito metagenomes and Wolbachia pangenomes in this study, and the connections between scientists with distinct skills that made this discovery possible, were developed at the MBL,” Meren says. “Almost everyone in this paper is somehow linked to the MBL.”
Citation:
Reveillaud, Julie and Bordenstein, Sarah et al (2019) The Wolbachia mobilome in Culex pipiens includes a putative plasmid. Nature Communications, DOI: 10.1038/s41467-019-08973-w
The Marine Biological Laboratory (MBL) is dedicated to scientific discovery – exploring fundamental biology, understanding marine biodiversity and the environment, and informing the human condition through research and education. Founded in Woods Hole, Massachusetts in 1888, the MBL is a private, nonprofit institution and an affiliate of the University of Chicago.
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