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| Title: | Analysis of the tripartite interactions between two bacterial symbionts, a novel Solitalea-like bacterium (Bacteroidota) and Cardinium, and the stored product mite Tyrophagus putrescentiae based on gene expression data | Authors: | Hubert, J Xiong, Q Glowska-Patyniak, E Furtak, EV Klimov, PB |
Issue Date: | Aug-2025 | Source: | Microbiology spectrum, Aug. 2025, v. 13, no. 8, e00609-25 | Abstract: | The intracellular parasite Cardinium influences the bacterial microbiome composition of arthropod hosts; however, the mechanisms involved remain poorly understood. We sought to evaluate the interactions between Cardinium (cTPut) and SOL in Tyrophagus putrescentiae cultures based on relative abundance and gene expression data. First, we assembled the genome of Candidatus Krakonobacterium acarorum (formerly the Soliltalea-like symbiont SOL), a novel lineage of the Bacteroidota symbiont of mites. The assemblage SOL genome (1.2 Mb) contained complete pathways for the biosynthesis of lipoic acids, pantothenate, and menaquinone from futalosine. SOL is considered a facultative inhabitant (with prevalences ranging from 36% to 80% among individuals) of the gut (from 102 to 104 copies/mite) that is not detected in eggs, suggesting an extracellular location in the gut of mites. Second, gene expression was analyzed in SOL-inhabited cultures, including two cultures with cTPut and two cultures without cTPut. Correlation-based evidence for competition between cTPut and SOL was found mainly in the expression of transporter proteins. The presence of cTPut decreased interactions between SOL and the mite host; however, SOL is under greater control by mites in the presence of cTPut than in the absence of cTPut. Mite KEGG gene expression levels in the peroxisome, autophagy, sphingolipid, apoptosis, PI3K–Akt, and lysozyme pathways were more strongly correlated with SOL gene expression in cultures without cTPut than in those with cTPut. In contrast, mite KEGG gene expression levels in the proteasome, NF-κB, TNF, calcium, and Rap1 signaling pathways were more strongly correlated with SOL in the presence of cTPut. The explanation for these results is that cTPut mostly interacts with the mite host, resulting in changes in the host’s immunity-related/regulatory pathways, indirectly affecting the symbiont SOL. | Publisher: | American Society for Microbiology | Journal: | Microbiology spectrum | EISSN: | 2165-0497 | DOI: | 10.1128/spectrum.00609-25 | Rights: | Copyright © 2025 Hubert et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/). The following publication Hubert J, Xiong Q, Glowska-Patyniak E, Furtak EV, Klimov PB. 2025. Analysis of the tripartite interactions between two bacterial symbionts, a novel Solitalea-like bacterium (Bacteroidota) and Cardinium, and the stored product mite Tyrophagus putrescentiae based on gene expression data. Microbiol Spectr 13:e00609-25 is available at https://doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.00609-25. |
| Appears in Collections: | Journal/Magazine Article |
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|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hubert_Analysis_Tripartite_Interactions.pdf | 2.53 MB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
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