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Bacteriophages Encode Factors Required for Protection in a Symbiotic Mutualism
476
Citations
18
References
2009
Year
BiologySymbiotic MutualismPhage LossParasitoid Aphidius ErviMedicineVirulence FactorBacteriologyWasp LarvaeBacteriophageProkaryotic VirusHost-microbe BiologyMicrobiologySymbiosisPhage BiologyBacterial Pathogens
Bacteriophages are known to carry key virulence factors for pathogenic bacteria, but their roles in symbiotic bacteria are less well understood. The heritable symbiont Hamiltonella defensa protects the aphid Acyrthosiphon pisum from attack by the parasitoid Aphidius ervi by killing developing wasp larvae. In a controlled genetic background, we show that a toxin-encoding bacteriophage is required to produce the protective phenotype. Phage loss occurs repeatedly in laboratory-held H. defensa-infected aphid clonal lines, resulting in increased susceptibility to parasitism in each instance. Our results show that these mobile genetic elements can endow a bacterial symbiont with benefits that extend to the animal host. Thus, phages vector ecologically important traits, such as defense against parasitoids, within and among symbiont and animal host lineages.
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