Comparative Genomics of the Endosymbiont Cardinium Causing Reproductive Manipulation in Encarsia Parasitoid Wasps

  • Dylan L. Schultz
  • , Corinne M. Stouthamer
  • , Suzanne E. Kelly
  • , Olivia L. Mathieson
  • , Manuel Kleiner
  • , Martha S. Hunter
  • , Stephan Schmitz-Esser

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Many invertebrates harbor the vertically transmitted endosymbiotic bacterium Cardinium hertigii, and some display altered reproductive phenotypes due to manipulation by Cardinium. Despite their host impact, genomic information for reproductive manipulator strains of Cardinium is sparse. Of the three reproductive manipulation phenotypes Cardinium is known to induce in its hosts, only two genomes causing cytoplasmic incompatibility (CI) are available, and genomes inducing other manipulation phenotypes are absent. In this study, we have sequenced and assembled four novel Cardinium genomes, three of which are associated with two different reproductive manipulation phenotypes, parthenogenesis induction and CI. Analysis of the genomes revealed that Cardinium associated with parasitoid wasp hosts in the genus Encarsia are generally more closely related to each other than to other Cardinium, but one strain, cEina2, is very similar to the whitefly-associated Cardinium strain cBtQ1. Further, unique and shared candidate genes for host interaction were identified, including putative zinc finger proteins shared by the parthenogenesis-associated strains cEper2 and cEhis1 and a large protein encoded by the CI Cardinium strain cEina3 with very distant similarity to the Wolbachia CI protein CidB. Finally, we predicted the presence of plasmids in three genomes. Also, despite the limited metabolic capacity of Cardinium, we identified potential horizontally transferred genes involved in central metabolism. These genomes will aid future studies to further our understanding of Cardinium-induced reproductive manipulation.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article numbere70084
JournalMicrobiologyOpen
Volume14
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2025
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Cardinium hertigii
  • cytoplasmic incompatibility
  • horizontal gene transfer
  • metabolism
  • parasitoid wasp
  • parthenogenesis induction

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Microbiology

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