Leishmaniasis in a domestic goat in Kenya
Publication Type
Journal Article
Journal Name
Journal of Virology
Publication Date
11-1-2021
Abstract
Bracoviruses are domesticated viruses found in parasitic wasp genomes. They are composed of genes of nudiviral origin that are involved in particle production and proviral segments containing virulence genes that are necessary for parasitism success. During particle production, proviral segments are amplified and individually packaged as DNA circles in nucleocapsids. These particles are injected by parasitic wasps into host larvae together with their eggs. Bracovirus circles of two wasp species were reported to undergo chromosomal integration in parasitized host hemocytes, through a conserved sequence named the host integration motif (HIM). Here, we used bulk Illumina sequencing to survey integrations of Cotesia typhae bracovirus circles in the DNA of its host, the maize corn borer (Sesamia nonagrioides), 7 days after parasitism. First, assembly and annotation of a high-quality genome for C. typhae enabled us to characterize 27 proviral segments clustered in proviral loci. Using these data, we characterized large numbers of chromosomal integrations (from 12 to 85 events per host haploid genome) for all 16 bracovirus circles containing a HIM. Integrations were found in four S. nonagrioides tissues and in the body of a caterpillar in which parasitism had failed. The 12 remaining circles do not integrate but are maintained at high levels in host tissues. Surprisingly, we found that HIM-mediated chromosomal integration in the wasp germ line has occurred accidentally at least six times during evolution. Overall, our study furthers our understanding of wasp-host genome interactions and supports HIM-mediated chromosomal integration as a possible mechanism of horizontal transfer from wasps to their hosts.
Keywords
Bracovirus, Chromosomal integration, Genomics, Horizontal transfer, Host-parasite relationship, Parasitoid wasps, Polydnavirus
PubMed ID
34319152
Recommended Citation
Muller, H., Chebbi, M., Bouzar, C., Périquet, G., Fortuna, T., Calatayud, P., Le Ru, B., Obonyo, J., Kaiser, L., Drezen, J., Huguet, E., & Gilbert, C. (2021). Leishmaniasis in a domestic goat in Kenya. Journal of Virology, 95 (22) https://doi.org/10.1128/JVI.00684-21