Abstract
Wolbachia is a widespread, intracellular symbiont of arthropods, able to induce reproductive distortions and antiviral protection in insects. Wolbachia can also be pathogenic, as is the case with wMelPop, a virulent variant of the endosymbiont of Drosophila melanogaster. An extensive genomic amplification of the 20kb region encompassing eight Wolbachia genes, called Octomom, is responsible for wMelPop virulence. The Octomom copy number in wMelPop can be highly variable between individual D. melanogaster flies, even when comparing siblings arising from a single female. Moreover, Octomom copy number can change rapidly between generations. These data suggest an intra-host variability in Octomom copy number between Wolbachia cells. Since wMelPop Wolbachia with different Octomom copy numbers grow at different rates, we hypothesized that selection could act on this intra-host variability. Here we tested if total Octomom copy number changes during the lifespan of individual Drosophila hosts, revealing selection for different Wolbachia populations. We performed a time course analysis of Octomom amplification in flies whose mothers were controlled for Octomom copy number. We show that despite the Octomom copy number being relatively stable it increases slightly throughout D. melanogaster adult life. This indicates that there is selection acting on the intra-host variation in the Octomom copy number over the lifespan of individual hosts. This within host selection for faster replicating bacterial symbionts may be in conflict with between host selection against highly pathogenic Wolbachia.
Introduction
Gene copy number variation is one of the mechanisms allowing rapid evolution across the tree of life [1–3]. In bacteria, growth inhibition by nutrient limitation or antibiotic presence may be overcome by increasing copy number of genes functionally related to these challenges [4]. Moreover, amplified genomic regions allow accumulation of mutations without the risk of loss of the original function. This can lead to the generation of more beneficial variants and subsequent loss of extra copies or repurposing of the new copies for a new function [4]. Thus, genomic amplifications generate extensive and reversible genetic variation, which can either increase the fitness of an individual directly or be a substrate on which adaptive evolution can act.
We have previously found that a genomic amplification affects the biology of the intracellular, maternally transmitted bacterium Wolbachia [5]. Wolbachia is a widespread endosymbiont of insects, causing an array of phenotypes, including reproductive manipulations [6] and antiviral protection [7,8]. Moreover, some Wolbachia strains can strongly reduce the host lifespan. This was first described for wMelPop, a laboratory Wolbachia variant, in Drosophila melanogaster [9]. The Octomom genomic region, which contains eight Wolbachia genes, is amplified in wMelPop, while it is present as a single copy in closely related non-pathogenic Wolbachia variants [10,11]. The number of copies of this region varies greatly between individual wMelPop-infected flies from the same population, ranging from two to ten copies [5]. We have previously established D. melanogaster lines carrying defined and different Octomom copy numbers and observed that the higher the Octomom copy number, the higher Wolbachia levels and the shorter the lifespan of its D. melanogaster host [5]. Moreover, a wMelPop that reverted to carrying only one Octomom copy proliferates at the same rate as the control wMelCS_b variant and is not pathogenic [5]. Thus, we identified Octomom copy number as a pathogenicity determinant of wMelPop [5].
The high variation in Octomom copy numbers between individual flies can also be observed in the progeny of single wMelPop-carrying females [5]. This variation between siblings could be explained by Wolbachia variation within a female and differential symbiont assortment to the progeny. The fact that the variability decreased under selection argues for initial high variation within single flies, which is pruned over a few generations of selection for either the highest or the lowest Octomom copy number. However, even under constant selection some variation was either maintained or continuously generated, since reversing the direction of the selection or relaxing it could rapidly change the Octomom copy numbers in these lines [5].
We hypothesized that variation in Octomom copy number between Wolbachia cells within an individual host could lead to a differential growth of these cells. If Wolbachia cells with higher Octomom copy number proliferate more, their frequency in the pool of Wolbachia within a host will increase over time, and the average Octomom copy number of the within-host population increases over the host lifespan. We tested this hypothesis through a time course analysis of Octomom copy number in individual wMelPop flies originating from mothers with controlled Octomom copy number.
Results
We examined the stability of Octomom copy number over the adult life (from eclosion to the onset of high mortality) in single wMelPop-carrying D. melanogaster (Fig 1A). The flies were the offspring of parents carrying wMelPop with low Octomom copy number (median of 4.5 Octomom copies, range from 4 to 5.5) or high Octomom copy number (median of 9.5, range from 8.5 to 11.5). The low Octomom cohort had, on average, 5.45 (standard deviation, SD = 0.82) Octomom copies per genome and the high Octomom cohort had an average of 10.29 (SD = 1.90) Octomom copies per genome. The fitted generalized additive model (GAM) clearly shows an increase in Octomom copy number in the first few days (six to eight days), which subsequently levels off at the later timepoints (Fig 1A and B). The trend is highly significant (the smooth term for time, p < 0.001). This shows that Octomom copy number in the wMelPop population increases during most of the adult host lifespan.
In parallel, we tested Wolbachia titer in the same flies. Wolbachia levels increase with the age of flies (log-linear mixed-effect model (lme), p < 0.001) and flies carrying wMelPop with higher Octomom copy numbers have 1.85 times higher Wolbachia levels compared to flies carrying wMelPop with lower Octomom copy numbers (lme, p < 0.001), confirming previous results (Fig 1C). However, we do not see a significant interaction between cohort and growth rate (lme, p = 0.102). We also tested if Octomom copy number could be an explanatory variable for Wolbachia levels within each cohort. This variable was not significant (lme, p = 0.48).
Discussion
By analyzing cohorts of individuals from mothers carrying Wolbachia with controlled Octomom copy number we observed that Octomom copy number is relatively stable over the life of the host. However, we detected a small, but clear and statistically significant, increase in Octomom copy number over time in the first six to eight days of the adult D. melanogaster life. This could be explained by selection acting on the heterogeneity of wMelPop copy number between Wolbachia cells within a single host. Since bacteria with higher copy numbers grow faster over time, they contribute more to the total pool of wMelPop in an older fly and therefore increase total Octomom copy number. In our dataset, the Octomom copy number stops increasing at the last days of the host life. This is surprising and could be explained by the initial heterogeneity in the flies being reduced in the course of selection. If Wolbachia cells with the maximal Octomom copy number within each fly reach a very high frequency or are fixed, there is no genetic variation for selection to act on, and the Octomom copy number does not continue to increase. Alternatively, the differential fitness between Wolbachia harboring different Octomom copy numbers may decrease with the age of the fly, weakening the strength of the selection and preventing continuous Octomom copy number growth.
Importantly, our data indicate that the selective pressures acting on wMelPop within and between hosts are different. Within a host, there may be a selection for Wolbachia that grow fast. On the other hand, competition between flies could select for Wolbachia that grow slower and have a lower cost for the host [5]. These opposing selective pressures may play a role in shaping the evolution of Wolbachia in natural populations.
Although the results presented here are compatible with our prediction of within host heterogeneity and selection, other forces may contribute to the changes in Octomom copy number during host lifespan. Amplification and deletion of Octomom copies may also occur throughout wMelPop host’s adult life. The rates of these two opposing mutations will determine an overall tendency of Octomom copy number to increase or decrease over time. Therefore, the dynamics of Octomom copy number changes may be the combination of selection and mutation. A mutation bias for deletion of Octomom copies could temper the effect of selection for higher Octomom copy numbers. On the other hand, a bias for amplification could explain the observed increase in Octomom copy number, even in the absence of selection. Nonetheless, this would also result in an increased proportion of more pathogenic wMelPop with host age. The influence of mutation and selection on Octomom copy number change during host lifespan may vary with intrinsic and extrinsic factors. For instance, mutation bias towards amplification or deletion could change with Octomom copy number itself. On the other hand, since temperature has a strong effect on wMelPop pathogenicity [9,12], it may also affect the differential growth of Wolbachia with different Octomom copy numbers and, therefore, within host selection on this trait. A mechanistic understanding of how Octomom copy number changes and influences Wolbachia phenotype and which factors modulate it will help disentangling the relative contribution of selection and mutation to Octomom copy number changes during D. melanogaster life.
Wolbachia with higher Octomom copy number proliferate more and are more pathogenic to their hosts [5]. The within host selection for bacteria that proliferate more and have a higher potential of being deleterious to the host may be a common phenomenon. For instance, Staphylococcus aureus variants that cause blood or deep tissue infection are, in the majority, the result of within-host selection from non-pathogenic nose colonizing variants [13]. The adaptations conferring high virulence identified in this study do not favor S. aureus dissemination and onward transmission (discussed in [13]). Thus, the selective pressure acting on the bacteria within a single host may be in conflict with the selective pressure acting on the entire bacterial population. This implies that although the more pathogenic bacterial variants arise throughout the life of the hosts, they are constantly purged from the overall bacterial population by selection either on the fitness of the host (vertically transmitted symbionts) or on the bacterial transmission capacity (horizontally transmitted symbionts).
A recent report suggested that wMelPop Octomom copy numbers change drastically during D. melanogaster lifespan, increasing more than two-fold in the first ten days of adult life and then decreasing more than four-fold over the next thirty days [14]. These results differ from the ones we present here and may be explained by the lack of experimental control for the Octomom copy number in these flies and determination of the Octomom copy numbers after the onset of mortality. Using data from Chrostek and Teixeira 2015 [5] we constructed a model showing that in a mixed population of flies the differential growth of Wolbachia with different Octomom copy numbers, combined with differential death of flies carrying Wolbachia with different Octomom copy numbers, leads to initial increase in Octomom copy number, followed by a decrease due to death of the flies carrying Wolbachia with higher Octomom copy number at the host population level [15].
Here we confirmed that wMelPop with higher Octomom copy number has higher Wolbachia titers, supporting our conclusion that this amplification controls wMelPop levels. However, the difference in growth rate between these lines was not statistically significant. This may be due to the high variability in the data and the differential growth between these lines being potentially small. We have previously shown different growth rates between wMelPop carrying one and two copies of Octomom and between these and wMelPop carrying 12 or 15 copies [5]. However, the growth rate of wMelPop carrying 12 and 15 copies was not significantly different [5]. This indicates that the relationship between growth rate and Octomom copy number is not linear and that differences in wMelPop carrying higher copy numbers may have a smaller impact on growth. Therefore, the difference in growth between wMelPop carrying five and ten copies may indeed be small. The difference in Wolbachia titers despite the lack of measurable difference in the growth rate might be the result of the cumulative effect of small growth rate differences throughout the fly development from egg to adult, the result of a differential growth rate at different development stages, or even the accumulation of small differences in growth for more than one generation.
The labile nature of the Octomom amplification and the resulting phenotypes of this amplification make wMelPop an interesting case study to understand genome dynamics and selective forces acting on endosymbionts. This system may be further used in the future to reveal general principles in host-bacteria symbiosis.
Material and methods
Fly strains
D. melanogaster DrosDel isogenic background (iso) flies with wMelCS_b and wMelPop were described before [5,10]. Selection on D. melanogaster lines carrying wMelPop with different Octomom copy number was described in [5].
Experimental setup for time-course analysis of WD0513 and Wolbachia levels
Female progeny of females from the 3rd generation of selection for Octomom copy number in the D. melanogaster DrosDel isogenic background (iso) [5] was collected at eclosion (ten females per tube), allowed to mate with brothers for 24 h (five males per tube), separated from males, and 20 females were sacrificed every second day for WD0513 and Wolbachia density quantification. Females were maintained at 25°C on a standard cornmeal diet without live yeast and were passed to fresh vials every 3 days. We sampled only until the onset of high mortality in the different lines in order to avoid sampling bias for surviving, low Octomom copy number bearing flies.
DNA extractions
DNA was extracted from single flies (wMelPop) or pools of ten flies (wMelCS_b controls). Each fly or pool of flies was squashed in 250 μl of 0.1 M Tris HCl, 0.1 M EDTA, and 1% SDS (pH 9.0) and incubated 30 min at 70°C. Next, 35 μl of 8 M CH3CO2K was added, and samples were mixed by shaking and incubated on ice for 30 min. Subsequently, samples were centrifuged for 15 min at 13,000 rpm at 4°C, and the supernatant was diluted 100× for qPCR.
Real-time quantitative PCR
The real-time qPCR reactions were performed using CFX384 Real-Time PCR Detection System (Bio-Rad) as described before [5,10]. Each reaction contained 6 μl of iQ SYBR Green Supermix (Bio-Rad), 0.5 μl of each primer (3.6 mM), and 5 μl of diluted DNA. We performed two technical replicates for each sample for each set of primers. Primer sequences were described before [5]. For all three genes assayed: Wolbachia WD0513 and wsp, and Drosophila Rpl32 the following thermal cycling protocol was applied: 2 min at 50°C, 10 min at 95°C, and 40 cycles of 30 s at 95°C, 1 min at 59°C, and 30 s at 72°C. Melting curves were examined to confirm the specificity of amplified products. Ct values were obtained using Bio-Rad CFX Manager software with default threshold settings. Ct values were subjected to a quality check - samples with standard deviation between technical replicates exceeding 0.5 for one of the genes were discarded. The experiment spanned six qPCR plates and three samples of ten wMelCS_b flies (extracted and aliquoted beforehand and assayed on every qPCR plate) were used to normalize between plates. Relative amounts of genes were calculated by the Pfaffl method [16]. To apply the method, the efficiency of each primer set was predetermined in a separate experiment. For relative Octomom copy number quantification, WD0513 was the target gene and the single-copy wsp gene was used as a reference. The medians of three samples of pools of ten wMelCS_b flies were used as control values for the Pfaffl method. wMelCS_b has one copy of the Octomom region in the genome, determined by the coverage analysis of sequencing data [10]. This sample, with known Octomom copy number, is required to estimate Octomom copy number of the remaining samples [17]. For Wolbachia quantification, wsp was the target gene and Drosophila Rpl32 gene was used as a reference. The levels of wsp are relative to the median of the samples of the low Octomom cohort at time zero.
Statistical analysis
The statistical analysis was performed in R [18]. The script of the analysis is provided in S1 Text. Graphs were generated using the package ggplot2 [19].
Since the temporal trend over time of the number of Octomom copies was not linear we analyse it by fitting a Generalized Additive Model (GAM, package mgcv in R [20]). We included time and line as independent variables and PCR plate as a random effect. The smooth terms for the interaction between time and lines were nonsignificant (p > 0.114) and were removed form the final model.
Analysis of wsp levels over time was performed with log-linear mixed-effect model fits (package lme4 in R [21]). The effect of interaction between factors was determined by an ANOVA comparing models fit to the data with and without the interaction.
Financial Disclosure
LT lab is funded by the Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia (www.fct.pt) grant PTDC/BEX-GMG/3128/2014. EC is supported by EMBO Long Term Fellowship EMBO ALTF 1497-2015 (http://www.embo.org), co-funded by Marie Curie Actions by the European Commission (LTFCOFUND2013, GA-2013-609409) (ec.europa.eu/research/mariecurieactions). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.
Acknowledgments
We thank Tiago Marques for advice on the statistical analysis.