Published February 2, 2016 | Version v1
Dataset Open

Data from: The hitchhiker's guide to Europe: the infection dynamics of an ongoing Wolbachia invasion and mitochondrial selective sweep in Rhagoletis cerasi

  • 1. Free University of Bozen-Bolzano
  • 2. Western Sydney University
  • 3. University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences
  • 4. University of Queensland
  • 5. Western Washington University
  • 6. University of Bremen
  • 7. University of Innsbruck

Description

Wolbachia is a maternally inherited and ubiquitous endosymbiont of insects. It can hijack host reproduction by manipulations such as cytoplasmic incompatibility (CI) to enhance vertical transmission. Horizontal transmission of Wolbachia can also result in the colonization of new mitochondrial lineages. In this study, we present a 15-year-long survey of Wolbachia in the cherry fruit fly Rhagoletis cerasi across Europe and the spatiotemporal distribution of two prevalent strains, wCer1 and wCer2, and associated mitochondrial haplotypes in Germany. Across most of Europe, populations consisted of either 100% singly (wCer1) infected individuals with haplotype HT1, or 100% doubly (wCer1&2) infected individuals with haplotype HT2, differentiated only by a single nucleotide polymorphism. In central Germany, singly infected populations were surrounded by transitional populations, consisting of both singly and doubly infected individuals, sandwiched between populations fixed for wCer1&2. Populations with fixed infection status showed perfect association of infection and mitochondria, suggesting a recent CI-driven selective sweep of wCer2 linked with HT2. Spatial analysis revealed a range expansion for wCer2 and a large transition zone in which wCer2 splashes appeared to coalesce into doubly infected populations. Unexpectedly, the transition zone contained a large proportion (22%) of wCer1&2 individuals with HT1, suggesting frequent intraspecific horizontal transmission. However, this horizontal transmission did not break the strict association between infection types and haplotypes in populations outside the transition zone, suggesting that this horizontally acquired Wolbachia infection may be transient. Our study provides new insights into the rarely studied Wolbachia invasion dynamics in field populations.

Notes

Files

Fstat.zip

Files (45.0 MB)

Name Size Download all
md5:e81d6cfa6f27f8eb5ce5679c92e2bb6f
110.5 kB Preview Download
md5:db5dcee99e2f8c1c9ab9f300f2da1cd6
28.5 MB Preview Download
md5:cdbfaae42e86e01fb250b5b69ebf9804
302.6 kB Download
md5:a50dbd086a2fefe2e0bf1a6935dc7158
15.5 MB Preview Download
md5:9476d94e040da494989194b1845f7c1f
524.1 kB Preview Download

Additional details

Related works

Is cited by
10.1111/mec.13571 (DOI)