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Biotin provisioning by horizontally transferred genes from bacteria confers animal fitness benefits.

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TLDR
The first experimental evidence that biotin synthesized through acquired HTGs is important in whiteflies and may be as well in other animals is provided, suggesting that B vitamin provisioning in animal-microbe symbiosis frequently evolved from bacterial symbionts to animal hosts through horizontal gene transfer events.
Abstract
Insect symbionts are widespread in nature and lateral gene transfer is prevalent in insect symbiosis. However, the function of horizontally transferred genes (HTGs) in insect symbiosis remains speculative, including the mechanism that enables insects to feed on plant phloem deficient in B vitamins. Previously, we found there is redundancy in biotin synthesis pathways from both whitefly Bemisia tabaci and symbiotic Hamiltonella due to the presence of whitefly HTGs. Here, we demonstrate that elimination of Hamiltonella decreased biotin levels but elevated the expression of horizontally transferred biotin genes in whiteflies. HTGs proteins exhibit specific expression patterns in specialized insect cells called bacteriocytes housing symbionts. Complementation with whitefly HTGs rescued E. coli biotin gene knockout mutants. Furthermore, silencing whitefly HTGs in Hamiltonella-infected whiteflies reduced biotin levels and hindered adult survival and fecundity, which was partially rescued by biotin supplementation. Each of horizontally transferred biotin genes are conserved in various laboratory cultures and species of whiteflies with geographically diverse distributions, which shares an evolutionary origin. We provide the first experimental evidence that biotin synthesized through acquired HTGs is important in whiteflies and may be as well in other animals. Our findings suggest that B vitamin provisioning in animal-microbe symbiosis frequently evolved from bacterial symbionts to animal hosts through horizontal gene transfer events. This study will also shed light on how the animal genomes evolve through functional transfer of genes with bacterial origin in the wider contexts of microbial ecology.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Genome streamlining in a minute herbivore that manipulates its host plant

TL;DR: In accordance with ecological specialization theory, this defense-suppressing herbivore has extremely reduced environmental response gene families such as those involved in chemoreception and detoxification, and other losses associate with this species’ highly derived body plan.
Journal ArticleDOI

Genetic innovations in animal-microbe symbioses.

TL;DR: The nature of symbiont innovations depends on their genetic population structure, categorized here as open, closed or mixed as discussed by the authors, which reflect modes of inter-host transmission that result in distinct genomic features, or genomic syndromes, in symbionts.
Journal ArticleDOI

Pantothenate mediates the coordination of whitefly and symbiont fitness

TL;DR: In this paper, the primary symbiont Portiera housed in bacteriocytes lacks pantothenate synthesis genes: panB and panC, which is presumably complemented by a fused gene panB-panC (hereafter panBC) horizontally transferred from bacteria in Bemisia tabaci MEAM1.
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Serratia symbiotica Enhances Fatty Acid Metabolism of Pea Aphid to Promote Host Development

TL;DR: The authors showed that Serratia symbiotica-infected pea aphids had a shorter nymphal developmental time and higher body weight than serratia-free aphids when fed on detached leaves.
Journal ArticleDOI

Lysine provisioning by horizontally acquired genes promotes mutual dependence between whitefly and two intracellular symbionts.

TL;DR: In this paper, the role of horizontal transferred genes (HTGs) in insect-symbiont interactions remains largely unknown, however, it has been shown that the acquisition of horizontally transferred lysine genes contributes to coadaptation and coevolution between B. tabaci and its symbionts.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Analyzing real-time PCR data by the comparative C(T) method.

TL;DR: This protocol provides an overview of the comparative CT method for quantitative gene expression studies and various examples to present quantitative gene Expression data using this method.
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One-step inactivation of chromosomal genes in Escherichia coli K-12 using PCR products

TL;DR: A simple and highly efficient method to disrupt chromosomal genes in Escherichia coli in which PCR primers provide the homology to the targeted gene(s), which should be widely useful, especially in genome analysis of E. coli and other bacteria.
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Construction of Escherichia coli K-12 in-frame, single-gene knockout mutants: the Keio collection.

TL;DR: These mutants—the ‘Keio collection’—provide a new resource not only for systematic analyses of unknown gene functions and gene regulatory networks but also for genome‐wide testing of mutational effects in a common strain background, E. coli K‐12 BW25113.
Journal ArticleDOI

Genomics and Evolution of Heritable Bacterial Symbionts

TL;DR: Insect heritable symbionts provide some of the extremes of cellular genomes, including the smallest and the fastest evolving, raising new questions about the limits of evolution of life.
Journal ArticleDOI

Bemisia tabaci: A Statement of Species Status

TL;DR: There is now sufficient evidence to state that B. tabaci is not made up of biotypes and that the use of biotype in this context is erroneous and misleading.
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