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Genetic variability, community structure, and horizontal transfer of endosymbionts among three Asia II- mitotypes in Pakistan. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Endosymbionts linked to whitefly cryptic species enhance the fitness and adaptation of their hosts, leading to an exploration of their genetic diversity across different environments in Pakistan.
  • Analysis identified whitefly mitotypes as part of the Asia II major clade (specifically II-1, II-5, and II-7) through mitochondrial gene sequencing, with a total of 43 distinct endosymbiont OTUs, primarily in mitotypes II-1 and II-7.
  • The distribution of these OTUs suggested a co-adaptation between the whitefly mitotypes and their endosymbionts, indicating potential horizontal transfer of OTUs among

Article Abstract

Endosymbionts associated with the whitefly cryptic species are known to contribute to host fitness and environmental adaptation. The genetic diversity and population complexity were investigated for endosymbiont communities of occupying different micro-environments in Pakistan. Mitotypes of were identified by comparative sequence analysis of the mitochondria cytochrome oxidase I (mt) gene sequence. Whitefly mitotypes belonged to the Asia II-1, -5, and -7 mitotypes of the Asia II major clade. The whitefly-endosymbiont communities were characterized based on 16S ribosomal RNA operational taxonomic unit (OTU) assignments, resulting in 43 OTUs. Most of the OTUs occurred in the Asia II-1 and II-7 mitotypes (  = .9,  < .005), while the Asia II-5 microbiome was less complex. The microbiome OTU groups were mitotype-specific, clustering with a basis in phylogeographical distribution and the corresponding ecological niche of their whitefly host, suggesting mitotype-microbiome co-adaptation. The primary endosymbiont was represented by a single, highly homologous OTU (0%-0.67% divergence). Two of six OTUs were uniquely associated with Asia II-5 and -7, and one occurred exclusively in Asia II-1, two only in Asia II-5, and one in both Asia II-1 and -7. Four other secondary endosymbionts, , , , and OTUs, were found at ≤29% frequencies. The most prevalent OTU was found in all three Asia II mitotypes (55% frequency), whereas the same strain of and was found in both Asia II-1 and -5, and a single OTU occurred in Asia II-1 and -7. This pattern is indicative of horizontal transfer, suggestive of a proximity between mitotypes sufficient for gene flow at overlapping mitotype ecological niches.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7083670PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.6107DOI Listing

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