Transovarial transmission of symbiotic bacteria in Mastotermes darwiniensis (Isoptera : mastotermitidae): Ultrastructural aspects and phylogenetic implications

Citation
L. Sacchi et al., Transovarial transmission of symbiotic bacteria in Mastotermes darwiniensis (Isoptera : mastotermitidae): Ultrastructural aspects and phylogenetic implications, ANN ENT S A, 93(6), 2000, pp. 1308-1313
Citations number
33
Categorie Soggetti
Entomology/Pest Control
Journal title
ANNALS OF THE ENTOMOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA
ISSN journal
00138746 → ACNP
Volume
93
Issue
6
Year of publication
2000
Pages
1308 - 1313
Database
ISI
SICI code
0013-8746(200011)93:6<1308:TTOSBI>2.0.ZU;2-R
Abstract
Intracellular symbiotic bacteria in specialized cells (bacteriocytes) of th e fat body are found in all cockroaches and in the termite Mastotermes darw iniensis Froggatt. DNA. sequence analysis of the bacteria in the two taxa s hows them to be phylogenetically related; thus, it has been suggested that the bacteriocyte symbiosis was established in an ancestor common to cockroa ches and termites, with a loss of the symbiosis in all other known termite lineages. The offspring of both cockroaches and Mastotermes acquire the sym biosis via transovarial transmission. However, transmission of the bacteria in Mastotermes has not been examined since the pioneering works carried ou t by Koch in the 1930s. Here we report on transovariole transmission in pri mary and neotenic reproductives, and show that the ovarioles of both harbor fat body, which contains bacteriocytes. The conspicuous number of ovarian bacteriocytes in neotenic queens corresponds to the pattern previously obse rved in female nymphs. Bacterial transmission to offspring during the life of the colony thus occurs through continuous provisioning of symbionts to t he ovariole from bacteriocytes in ovarian fat body. This pattern parallels that of cockroaches as does the entire mechanism of transovarial transmissi on.