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Comparative Genomics of Facultative Bacterial Symbionts Isolated from European Orius Species Reveals an Ancestral Symbiotic Association

Xiaorui Chen, Matthew Hitchings Orcid Logo, José E. Mendoza, Virginia Balanza, Paul Facey Orcid Logo, Paul Dyson Orcid Logo, Pablo Bielza, Ricardo Del Sol, Ricardo Del Sol Abascal Orcid Logo

Frontiers in Microbiology, Volume: 8

Swansea University Authors: Matthew Hitchings Orcid Logo, Paul Facey Orcid Logo, Paul Dyson Orcid Logo, Ricardo Del Sol Abascal Orcid Logo

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Abstract

The use of several species within the genus Orius in pest control is widely spread, particularly in Mediterranean Europe. The characterisation and contribution of microbial symbionts to Orius sp. fitness, behaviour, and potential impact on human health has been neglected. This paper provides the fir...

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Published in: Frontiers in Microbiology
ISSN: 1664-302X
Published: 2017
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spelling 2020-06-03T12:39:16.2693201 v2 35991 2017-10-10 Comparative Genomics of Facultative Bacterial Symbionts Isolated from European Orius Species Reveals an Ancestral Symbiotic Association be98847c72c14a731c4a6b7bc02b3bcf 0000-0002-5527-4709 Matthew Hitchings Matthew Hitchings true false dc25910b8004b2694df68ed7426e1286 0000-0002-3229-0255 Paul Facey Paul Facey true false 300e3f46b70ae83f563b24f41d00cd17 0000-0002-0558-2666 Paul Dyson Paul Dyson true false c40efdd0f744eef81f726c98cec03d07 0000-0003-0015-3843 Ricardo Del Sol Abascal Ricardo Del Sol Abascal true false 2017-10-10 BMS The use of several species within the genus Orius in pest control is widely spread, particularly in Mediterranean Europe. The characterisation and contribution of microbial symbionts to Orius sp. fitness, behaviour, and potential impact on human health has been neglected. This paper provides the first genome sequence level description of the predominant culturable facultative bacterial symbionts associated with five Orius species (O. laevigatus, O. niger, O. pallidicornis, O. majusculus, and O. albidipennis) from several geographical locations. Two types of symbionts were broadly classified as members of the genera Serratia and Leucobacter, while a third constitutes a new genus within the Erwiniaceae. These symbionts were found to colonise all the insect specimens tested, which evidenced an ancestral symbiotic association between these bacteria and the genus Orius. Pangenome analyses of the Serratia sp. isolates offered clues linking Type VI secretion system effector–immunity proteins from the Tai4 sub-family to the symbiotic lifestyle. Journal Article Frontiers in Microbiology 8 1664-302X 10 10 2017 2017-10-10 10.3389/fmicb.2017.01969 COLLEGE NANME Biomedical Sciences COLLEGE CODE BMS Swansea University 2020-06-03T12:39:16.2693201 2017-10-10T08:25:10.9941495 Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences Swansea University Medical School - Medicine Xiaorui Chen 1 Matthew Hitchings 0000-0002-5527-4709 2 José E. Mendoza 3 Virginia Balanza 4 Paul Facey 0000-0002-3229-0255 5 Paul Dyson 0000-0002-0558-2666 6 Pablo Bielza 7 Ricardo Del Sol 8 Ricardo Del Sol Abascal 0000-0003-0015-3843 9 0035991-06112017155907.pdf 35991.pdf 2017-11-06T15:59:07.3900000 Output 2168594 application/pdf Version of Record true 2017-11-06T00:00:00.0000000 This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). true eng
title Comparative Genomics of Facultative Bacterial Symbionts Isolated from European Orius Species Reveals an Ancestral Symbiotic Association
spellingShingle Comparative Genomics of Facultative Bacterial Symbionts Isolated from European Orius Species Reveals an Ancestral Symbiotic Association
Matthew Hitchings
Paul Facey
Paul Dyson
Ricardo Del Sol Abascal
title_short Comparative Genomics of Facultative Bacterial Symbionts Isolated from European Orius Species Reveals an Ancestral Symbiotic Association
title_full Comparative Genomics of Facultative Bacterial Symbionts Isolated from European Orius Species Reveals an Ancestral Symbiotic Association
title_fullStr Comparative Genomics of Facultative Bacterial Symbionts Isolated from European Orius Species Reveals an Ancestral Symbiotic Association
title_full_unstemmed Comparative Genomics of Facultative Bacterial Symbionts Isolated from European Orius Species Reveals an Ancestral Symbiotic Association
title_sort Comparative Genomics of Facultative Bacterial Symbionts Isolated from European Orius Species Reveals an Ancestral Symbiotic Association
author_id_str_mv be98847c72c14a731c4a6b7bc02b3bcf
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author_id_fullname_str_mv be98847c72c14a731c4a6b7bc02b3bcf_***_Matthew Hitchings
dc25910b8004b2694df68ed7426e1286_***_Paul Facey
300e3f46b70ae83f563b24f41d00cd17_***_Paul Dyson
c40efdd0f744eef81f726c98cec03d07_***_Ricardo Del Sol Abascal
author Matthew Hitchings
Paul Facey
Paul Dyson
Ricardo Del Sol Abascal
author2 Xiaorui Chen
Matthew Hitchings
José E. Mendoza
Virginia Balanza
Paul Facey
Paul Dyson
Pablo Bielza
Ricardo Del Sol
Ricardo Del Sol Abascal
format Journal article
container_title Frontiers in Microbiology
container_volume 8
publishDate 2017
institution Swansea University
issn 1664-302X
doi_str_mv 10.3389/fmicb.2017.01969
college_str Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
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hierarchy_top_title Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
hierarchy_parent_id facultyofmedicinehealthandlifesciences
hierarchy_parent_title Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
department_str Swansea University Medical School - Medicine{{{_:::_}}}Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences{{{_:::_}}}Swansea University Medical School - Medicine
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description The use of several species within the genus Orius in pest control is widely spread, particularly in Mediterranean Europe. The characterisation and contribution of microbial symbionts to Orius sp. fitness, behaviour, and potential impact on human health has been neglected. This paper provides the first genome sequence level description of the predominant culturable facultative bacterial symbionts associated with five Orius species (O. laevigatus, O. niger, O. pallidicornis, O. majusculus, and O. albidipennis) from several geographical locations. Two types of symbionts were broadly classified as members of the genera Serratia and Leucobacter, while a third constitutes a new genus within the Erwiniaceae. These symbionts were found to colonise all the insect specimens tested, which evidenced an ancestral symbiotic association between these bacteria and the genus Orius. Pangenome analyses of the Serratia sp. isolates offered clues linking Type VI secretion system effector–immunity proteins from the Tai4 sub-family to the symbiotic lifestyle.
published_date 2017-10-10T03:44:56Z
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