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Social behavior in bees influences the abundance of Sodalis (Enterobacteriaceae) symbionts

Benjamin ER Rubin, Jon G Sanders, Kyle M Turner, Naomi E Pierce, Sarah D Kocher
doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/192617
Benjamin ER Rubin
Princeton University;
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  • For correspondence: ben.e.r.rubin@gmail.com
Jon G Sanders
University of California San Diego;
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Kyle M Turner
Harvard University
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Naomi E Pierce
Harvard University
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Sarah D Kocher
Princeton University;
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Abstract

Social interactions can facilitate transmission of microbes between individuals, reducing variation in gut communities within social groups. Thus, the evolution of social behaviors and symbiont community composition have the potential to be tightly linked. We explored this connection by characterizing the diversity of bacteria associated with both social and solitary bee species within the behaviorally variable family Halictidae using 16S amplicon sequencing. Contrary to expectations, we found few differences in bacterial abundance or variation between social forms, and most halictid species appear to share similar gut bacterial communities. However, several strains of Sodalis, a genus described as a symbiont in a variety of insects but yet to be characterized in bees, differ in abundance between social and solitary bees. Phylogenetic reconstructions based on whole-genome alignments indicate that Sodalis has independently colonized halictids at least three times. These strains appear to be mutually exclusive within individual bees, although they are not host-species-specific and no signatures of vertical transmission were observed, suggesting that Sodalis strains compete for access to hosts. De novo genome assemblies indicate that these three lineages are subject to widespread relaxed selection and that Sodalis is undergoing genome degeneration during the colonization of these hosts.

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The copyright holder for this preprint is the author/funder. It is made available under a CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 International license.
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  • Posted September 22, 2017.

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Social behavior in bees influences the abundance of Sodalis (Enterobacteriaceae) symbionts
Benjamin ER Rubin, Jon G Sanders, Kyle M Turner, Naomi E Pierce, Sarah D Kocher
bioRxiv 192617; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/192617
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Social behavior in bees influences the abundance of Sodalis (Enterobacteriaceae) symbionts
Benjamin ER Rubin, Jon G Sanders, Kyle M Turner, Naomi E Pierce, Sarah D Kocher
bioRxiv 192617; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/192617

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