Co-phylogeny of a hyper-symbiotic system: Endosymbiotic bacteria (Gammaproteobacteria), chewing lice (Insecta: Phthiraptera) and birds (Passeriformes)

Mol Phylogenet Evol. 2024 Jan:190:107957. doi: 10.1016/j.ympev.2023.107957. Epub 2023 Oct 30.

Abstract

Chewing lice are hosts to endosymbiotic bacteria as well as themselves being permanent parasites. This offers a unique opportunity to examine the cophylogenetic relationships between three ecologically interconnected organismal groups: birds, chewing lice, and bacteria. Here, we examine the cophylogenetic relationships between lice in the genus Guimaraesiella Eichler, 1949, their endosymbiotic Sodalis-allied bacteria, and a range of bird species from across South China. Both event and distance-based cophylogenetic analyses were explored to compare phylogenies of the three organismal groups. Pair-wise comparisons between lice-endosymbionts and bird-endosymbionts indicated that their evolutionary histories are not independent. However, comparisons between lice and birds, showed mixed results; the distance-based method of ParaFit indicated that their evolutionary histories are not independent, while the event-based method of Jane indicated that their phylogenies were no more congruent than expected by chance. Notably, louse host-switching does not seem to have affected bacterial strains, as conspecific lice sampled from distantly related hosts share bacteria belonging to the same clade.

Keywords: Co-evolution; Endosymbiont; Guimaraesiella; Lice; Phthiraptera; Sodalis.

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Biological Evolution
  • Bird Diseases* / parasitology
  • Gammaproteobacteria*
  • Ischnocera*
  • Passeriformes*
  • Phthiraptera* / genetics
  • Phylogeny