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Wednesday, April 11, 2007 | Reason : Evolution and Biology | print version Print | Comments

Document Evolution of symbiosis

by PhysOrg.com

Reposted from:
http://www.physorg.com/news95408496.html

Symbionts (Buchnera aphidicola) within a bacteriocyte of a pea aphid (Acyrthosiphon pisum). The central object is the host nucleus. Buchnera cells are round and packed into the cytoplasm. Credit: Photo: J. White and N. Moran, University of Arizona

The aphid Acyrthosiphon pisum depends on a bacterial symbiont, Buchnera aphidicola, for amino acids it can't get from plants. The aphid, in turn, provides the bacterium with energy and carbon as well as shelter inside specialized cells.

Such interdependent relationships are not unusual in the natural world. What is unusual, report Helen Dunbar, Nancy Moran, and colleagues in a new study published this week in the open access journal PLoS Biology, is that a single point mutation in Buchnera's genome can have consequences for its aphid partner that are sometimes detrimental, and sometimes beneficial.

The authors probe Buchnera's and A. pisum's ability to tolerate heat. When exposed to high temperatures, Buchnera is supposed to activate special "heat-shock" genes whose products help to protect proteins from heat-related degradation. By using microarrays to assess activity of A. pisum and Buchnera genes, the researchers discovered that after a four-hour exposure to 35 °C temperature, some of their laboratory strains of Buchnera upregulated the heat-shock genes, but others did not. Further analysis showed the genetic basis for the difference: a single missing nucleotide in an adenine-filled stretch of DNA, called a promoter, that's involved in activating the heat-shock gene. Testing at a range of temperatures from 15 °C to 35 °C showed that activation of the heat-shock gene was consistently lower in the lines with the missing nucleotide than in the normal bacteria.

What does this mean for A. pisum's ability to tolerate tough conditions? To answer that, the researchers asked whether exposing juvenile aphid hosts of Buchnera with either long or short promoters to four hours of high temperatures (35 or 38 °C) affected their ability to reproduce. They found that few of the aphids with bacteria bearing short promoters reproduced after the heat treatment, while those with bacteria bearing the longer promoters had no trouble. In addition, aphids that had been exposed to the high temperatures and had the short-promoter-bearing bacteria weighed less as adults and had far fewer Buchnera inside them than did their counterparts with long-promoter-bearing bacteria.

Given these seemingly huge disadvantages to dropping a single adenine, it's hard to believe the mutation could last long in a Buchnera population. Yet, by sequencing and comparing the Buchnera associated with various A. pisum lines, the researchers discovered that the short-promoter option had arisen and been fixed twice in laboratory stock and was also found at frequencies of 21% and 13%, respectively, in bacteria in field-collected aphids from Wisconsin and New York.

Population genetic theory predicts that when a mutation is maintained in a population at high frequencies, it likely confers some benefit to its bearer. What could be the advantage of carrying a gene that causes one to lose the ability to reproduce at high temperatures?

A clue to the answer comes from the wild populations in which the mutation was not found: those living in Arizona and Utah. Could the bacterial mutation confer a competitive advantage that's only relevant in cooler climates? To find that out, the researchers performed a second test using a range of four-hour exposure temperatures. They discovered that short-promoter bacteria-bearing aphids produced progeny faster than did the normal ones when raised at 15 °C or 20 °C. Thus, though aphids containing bacterial symbionts with the heat-shock-promoter mutation fare worse than normal aphids after exposure to high temperatures, they do better under cool conditions, giving the mutation a selective advantage that causes it to be maintained in the population.

In addition to their explorations of A. pisum and its Buchnera, Moran's team also looked for and found multiple-adenine stretches related to heat-shock genes in Buchnera symbiotic with other aphid species. This offers fertile ground for further study of the intriguing interplay among aphids, bacteria, and temperature.

Source: Public Library of Science

Comments 1 - 7 of 7 |

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1. Comment #31147 by Rtambree on April 11, 2007 at 6:31 am

Reminds me of (Carl Sagan's first wife) Lynn Margulis' Symbiogenesis

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Symbiogenesis

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2. Comment #31155 by maton100 on April 11, 2007 at 7:34 am

 avatarBacterial mutation = Jesus. Aphids for Christ.

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3. Comment #31204 by NeoGothic on April 11, 2007 at 12:06 pm

The evolution of symbiotic species speaks deeply of a purely biological reason to cooperate, and not just between different species, but also in the same species. The "out-group" hostility that religion provokes is surely a major force for conflict in our world. On a related evolutionary issue, check out this link: http://www.livescience.com/animalworld/070411_chimps_cave.html It's an article about that same group of chimps that was observed using sharp sticks as spears to hunt bushbabies. They've now been seen using caves as shelter. Absolutley amazing.

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4. Comment #31302 by Nikki on April 12, 2007 at 1:30 am

Symbiosis, natural selection and co-evolution....
Some in this world need to believe there is a god because..? Is there really any excuse for deliberate ignorance?

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5. Comment #31417 by Martha on April 12, 2007 at 2:22 pm

 avatarStockholm Syndrome comes to mind. Children, by their very nature, identify (bond with) whoever their parents or guardians happen to be. If, for example, they happen to have parents/guardians who want them to believe in their particular religious ideology, then that's what the children will believe in - in order to survive; because ALL of life is naturally programmed to do just that - survive for as long as possible (in order to propagate its genes).

So, as the saying goes: What's new, besides New York and New Jersey?!!!

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6. Comment #31816 by devolved on April 14, 2007 at 12:24 pm

"What could be the advantage of carrying a gene that causes one to lose the ability to reproduce at high temperatures?"

A loss of ability? So genetic information is not added but lost? So this must be an example of natural selection not evolution.

Natural selection involves merely the shuffling, rearrangement and degeneration of existing genetic information, whereas evolution requires encyclopaedic quantities of new information to be produced by unintelligent, natural processes—information coding for new types of organs, limbs, physiologies, etc.

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7. Comment #31951 by chamber on April 15, 2007 at 3:31 am

Funny vocabulary
Smart genes
natural slection
evolution
Delusions that there is no God
I just bought computer parts - chips, case, light bulp etc. I put them on my table and now I am waiting. I opened the windows as well, you know the wind ir rain can help. Can I borrow the fun vocabulary to assemble my computer? How long do I have to wait for my computer to be assembled by evolution, or natural selection? Please help me? I need my computer.

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