Publication | Open Access
Phylogenetic analysis of the 16S rDNA of the cytoplasmic bacterium<i>Wolbachia</i>from the novel host<i>Folsomia candida</i>(Hexapoda, Collembola) and its implications for wolbachial taxonomy
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1999
Year
TaxonomyEntomologyWolbachia PipientisWolbachial TaxonomyPhylogenetic AnalysisWolbachia StrainPhylogeneticsMolecular EcologyProtistPhylogenomicsBiologyWolbachial Phylogenetic TreeMicrobial SystematicsNatural SciencesEvolutionary BiologyPhylogenetic MethodMicrobiologyFungal SystematicsMedicine
Wolbachia pipientis are intracellular, transovarially inherited alpha-Proteobacteria in invertebrates. Four major Wolbachia groups exist: A, B (contained in divergent arthropods), C and D (harbored by Nematoda). By means of transmission electron microscopy, we observed Wolbachia-like bacteria in a primitive insect, Folsomia candida (Hexapoda, Collembola, Isotomidae). 16S rDNA analysis proved them to constitute a novel lineage, henceforth named group E, in the wolbachial phylogenetic tree. It shares 97.8% 16S rDNA homology with its nearest neighbors, groups A and B, which diverged from it more recently. We propose (i) a new taxon E for the Wolbachia strain in F. candida, (ii) that the single-described Wolbachia pipientis fall apart into at least three species: C, D and the large E-A-B complex. F. candida's group E Wolbachia rekindle the question about invasive capacities of free-living ancestral wolbachiae and horizontal transfer.
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