Symbiotic bacteria in oocyte and ovarian cell mitochondria of the tick Rodes ricinus:: biology and phylogenetic position

被引:10
作者
Rymaszewska, Anna [1 ]
机构
[1] Tech Univ Szczecin, Dept Genet, PL-71065 Szczecin, Poland
关键词
D O I
10.1007/s00436-006-0412-8
中图分类号
R38 [医学寄生虫学]; Q [生物科学];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ; 100103 ;
摘要
Under natural conditions, eukaryote cells may contain bacteria. Arthropods such as ticks, insects or mites are a group particularly favoured by the obligate intracellular bacteria. While arthropods are vectors for some of them, other bacteria inhabit invertebrate host cells having entered mutualistic interactions. Such endosymbionts dwell usually in the host cell vacuoles or cytoplasm but have been also reported from tick oocyte mitochondria. The microorganisms contribute to mitochondria degradation, but their colonies are not eliminated from the tick cells affected. So far, such bacteria have been detected in three research centres. The Italian centre has reported on results of microscope and molecular analyses, while the Polish centre published molecular data. The Danish centre registered a 16S rRNA gene fragment in GenBank. Independent comparisons of the 16S rRNA gene sequences, carried out in the Italian and Polish centres, confirmed that the nucleotide sequenced of the Ixodes ricinus endosymbionts formed a single clade with certain non-identified tick bacterium species isolated from the tick Haemaphysalis wellingtoni. On the other hand, pathogenic species of the genera Anaplasma, Ehrlichia and Rickettsia detected in I. ricinus as well as symbionts of the genus Wolbachia present in Culex pipiens and Drosophila simulans have been placed at a different site on the phylogenetic tree.
引用
收藏
页码:917 / 920
页数:4
相关论文
共 13 条
[1]  
[Anonymous], ECOLOGY ANIMAL PARAS
[2]   A novel alpha-proteobacterium resides in the mitochondria of ovarian cells of the tick Ixodes ricinus [J].
Beninati, T ;
Lo, N ;
Sacchi, L ;
Genchi, C ;
Noda, H ;
Bandi, C .
APPLIED AND ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY, 2004, 70 (05) :2596-2602
[3]  
de Puytorac P, 1972, C R Seances Soc Biol Fil, V166, P604
[5]   DETECTION OF RICKETTSIA-LIKE MICROORGANISMS WITHIN THE OVARIES OF FEMALE IXODES-RICINUS TICKS [J].
LEWIS, D .
ZEITSCHRIFT FUR PARASITENKUNDE-PARASITOLOGY RESEARCH, 1979, 59 (03) :295-298
[6]  
Margulis L, 1981, SYMBIOSIS CELL EVOLU
[7]   Endosymbionts of ticks and their relationship to Wolbachia spp. and tick-borne pathogens of humans and animals [J].
Noda, H ;
Munderloh, UG ;
Kurtti, TJ .
APPLIED AND ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY, 1997, 63 (10) :3926-3932
[8]  
Rymaszewska Anna, 2006, Ekologija, V2, P44
[9]   A symbiont of the tick Ixodes ricinus invades and consumes mitochondria in a mode similar to that of the parasitic bacterium Bdellovibrio bacteriovorus [J].
Sacchi, L ;
Bighardi, E ;
Corona, S ;
Beninati, T ;
Lo, N ;
Franceschi, A .
TISSUE & CELL, 2004, 36 (01) :43-53
[10]   Survey of tickborne infections in Denmark [J].
Skarphédinsson, S ;
Jensen, PM ;
Kristiansen, K .
EMERGING INFECTIOUS DISEASES, 2005, 11 (07) :1055-1061