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It all started with a crab apple tree.
Two years ago, a
71-year-old Indiana man impaled his hand on a branch after cutting down a
dead tree. The wound caused an infection that led scientists to
discover a new bacterium and solve a mystery about how bacteria came to
live inside insects.
On Oct. 15, 2010, Thomas Fritz, a retired
inventor, engineer and volunteer firefighter, cut down a dead,
10-foot-tall crab apple tree outside his home near Evansville, Ind.
As
he dragged away the debris, he got tangled in it and fell. A small
branch impaled his right hand in the fleshy web between the thumb and
index finger.
A former emergency medical technician, Fritz dressed
the wound, which became swollen. Then he waited for a scheduled visit
with his doctor a few days later. By then, a cyst formed at the wound
site. The doctor put Fritz on an antibiotic after sending a sample of
the cyst to a lab.
The pain and swelling persisted and the wound became abscessed.
About
five weeks after the accident, an orthopedic surgeon removed several
pieces of bark from the wound, which finally healed without further
incident.
Only later did Fritz find out that his infected wound
contained a previously unknown bacterium that scientists say could be
used to block disease transmission by insects and prevent crop damage.
Scientists call the new strain human Sodalis or HS; it's related to Sodalis, a genus of bacteria that lives symbiotically inside insects' guts.
The journal PLOS Genetics published a paper detailing the discovery today.
"Symbiotic
interactions between microorganisms and insects are common, and
biologists suspect that they're an important driver of biological
diversification," says Matt Kane, program director in the National
Science Foundation's Division of Environmental Biology, which funded the
research.
"But how such symbioses came to be is often a mystery,"
Kane says. "This particular story has a happy ending, but also an
interesting one, because researchers used it to gain insight into how
insects and microbes can form symbiotic partnerships in the first
place."
As in the case of the crab apple tree, "there are
bacteria in the environment that form symbiotic relationships with
insects," says University of Utah biologist Kelly Oakeson, the study's
lead co-author. "This is the first time such a bacterium has been found
and studied."
Identifying a New Strain of Bacteria
The
lab that first received the sample from Fritz's infected wound couldn't
identify the bacterium once it was isolated. So the organism was
shipped to ARUP Laboratories, a national pathology reference library
operated by the University of Utah.
An automated analysis at ARUP found that the bacterium from Fritz was E. coli, but scientists doubted the results.
"We
had close matches for it, but none were validly described species,"
says Mark Fisher of the ARUP Institute for Clinical and Experimental
Pathology and a co-author of the paper. "It caught my eye because I
knew Colin Dale worked on Sodalis."
Dale is the researcher who discovered and named Sodalis in 1999. He is a biologist at the University of Utah and is the study's senior author.
He
says that genetic sequencing showed that the HS bacterium is related to
bacteria that live symbiotically in 17 insect species, including tsetse
flies, weevils, bird lice and stinkbugs, and is most closely related to
bacteria in the chestnut weevil and a stinkbug species.
The study compared HS with genomes of the strain Sodalis glossinidius that lives in tsetse flies and another Sodalis-like bacterium that lives in grain weevils.
Compared with HS, the other two bacterial species have lost or deactivated about half their genes.
A Missing Link
According
to Dale, the findings provide "a missing link in our understanding of
how beneficial insect-bacteria relationships originate.
"They
show that these relationships arise independently in each insect. The
insect picks up a pathogen that is widespread in the environment and
then domesticates it. This happens independently in each insect."
A competing theory is that parasitic wasps and mites spread symbiotic bacteria from one insect to another.
Dale says that theory cannot explain why such similar types of Sodalis bacteria are found in insects that differ widely in location and diet, including insects that feed either on plants or animals.
The
new results support the theory that insects are infected by pathogenic
bacteria from plants or animals in their environment, and that the
bacteria evolve to become less virulent and to provide benefits to the
insect.
Then, instead of spreading from one insect to another, the bacteria spread from mother insects to their offspring.
Taming Invading Bacteria
Various
bacteria live symbiotically in blood or fat cells or in special
structures attached to the guts of as many as 10 percent of all insects.
The bacteria gain shelter and nutrition from their insect hosts,
and they produce nutrients--B vitamins and amino acids--to help feed
the insects.
Sometimes they also produce toxins to kill invaders, such as fungi or the eggs laid in an insect by a parasitic wasp.
Sodalis is only one of several types of bacteria that live in insects.
Symbiotic
bacteria are known for having the smallest genetic blueprints, or
genomes, of any cellular organism because as they evolve inside an
insect, they lose genes that would be needed for survival outside the
insect.
But when biologists sequenced the new bacterium's genome,
they found that HS has a relatively large genetic blueprint and is
closely related to Sodalis-like bacteria that have smaller genomes and live in many species of insects, implying that Sodalis-like bacteria all descended from a bacterium like HS.
A Way to Block Some Insect-Spread Diseases?
The
researchers believe the discovery could have important implications.
They say it may be possible to genetically alter the new bacterium to
block disease transmission by insects like tsetse flies and prevent crop
damage by insect-borne viruses.
"If we can genetically modify a
bacterium that could be put back into insects, it could be used as a way
to combat diseases transmitted by those insects," says Adam Clayton, a
University of Utah biologist and lead author of the paper unveiling the
new bacterium and its genome.
Tsetse flies and aphids both carry symbiotic Sodalis bacteria related to strain HS. Sodalis doesn't grow well outside insects, but HS grows well in the lab.
So
it may be possible to insert genes in HS, and then place the bacteria
in tsetse flies to kill the protozoan parasites that live in the flies
and cause sleeping sickness in people and domestic animals in Africa.
Aphids transmit many plant viruses that attack soybeans, alfalfa, beets, beans and peanuts.
Replacing their normal symbiotic bacteria with a genetically engineered strain of HS could interfere with disease transmission.
The
researchers speculate that in addition to the HS bacterium, there are
likely many other undiscovered bacteria in the environment that could
form symbiotic relationships with insects.
"We have identified
very few of the bacteria that exist in nature," says Dale, "and new
species and strains like HS are often only discovered when they infect
humans."
Additional co-authors of the paper are Maria Gutin,
Arthur Pontes, Diane Dunn, Andrew von Niederhausern and Robert Weiss,
all of the University of Utah.
The National Institutes of Health also funded the research.
-NSF-
Media Contacts
Cheryl Dybas, NSF (703) 292-7734 cdybas@nsf.gov
Lee Siegel, University of Utah (801) 581-8993 lee.siegel@utah.edu
Lee Siegel, University of Utah (801) 581-8993 lee.siegel@utah.edu
The National Science Foundation (NSF) is an independent federal
agency that supports fundamental research and education across all
fields of science and engineering. In fiscal year (FY) 2012, its budget
is $7.0 billion. NSF funds reach all 50 states through grants to nearly
2,000 colleges, universities and other institutions. Each year, NSF
receives over 50,000 competitive requests for funding, and makes about
11,000 new funding awards. NSF also awards nearly $420 million in
professional and service contracts yearly.
Useful NSF Web Sites:
NSF Home Page: http://www.nsf.gov
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NSF Home Page: http://www.nsf.gov
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Awards Searches: http://www.nsf.gov/awardsearch/
The National Science Foundation (NSF)
Guillermo Gonzalo Sánchez Achutegui
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