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Single and multi-gene phylogeny of Hepatospora (Microsporidia) – a generalist pathogen of farmed and wild crustacean hosts

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 March 2016

K. S. BATEMAN*
Affiliation:
European Union Reference Laboratory for Crustacean Diseases, Centre for Environment, Fisheries and Aquaculture Science (Cefas), Weymouth Laboratory, Weymouth, Dorset, DT4 8UB, UK
D. WIREDU-BOAKYE
Affiliation:
Biosciences, University of Exeter, Geoffrey Pope Building, Stocker Road, Devon, EX4 4EU, UK
R. KERR
Affiliation:
European Union Reference Laboratory for Crustacean Diseases, Centre for Environment, Fisheries and Aquaculture Science (Cefas), Weymouth Laboratory, Weymouth, Dorset, DT4 8UB, UK
B. A. P. WILLIAMS
Affiliation:
Biosciences, University of Exeter, Geoffrey Pope Building, Stocker Road, Devon, EX4 4EU, UK
G. D. STENTIFORD
Affiliation:
European Union Reference Laboratory for Crustacean Diseases, Centre for Environment, Fisheries and Aquaculture Science (Cefas), Weymouth Laboratory, Weymouth, Dorset, DT4 8UB, UK
*
*Corresponding author: European Union Reference Laboratory for Crustacean Diseases, Centre for Environment, Fisheries and Aquaculture Science (Cefas), Weymouth Laboratory, Weymouth, Dorset DT4 8UB, UK. E-mail: kelly.bateman@cefas.co.uk

Summary

Almost half of all known microsporidian taxa infect aquatic animals. Of these, many cause disease in arthropods. Hepatospora, a recently erected genus, infects epithelial cells of the hepatopancreas of wild and farmed decapod crustaceans. We isolated Hepatospora spp. from three different crustacean hosts, inhabiting different habitats and niches; marine edible crab (Cancer pagurus), estuarine and freshwater Chinese mitten crab (Eriocheir sinensis) and the marine mussel symbiont pea crab (Pinnotheres pisum). Isolates were initially compared using histology and electron microscopy revealing variation in size, polar filament arrangement and nuclear development. However, sequence analysis of the partial SSU rDNA gene could not distinguish between the isolates (~99% similarity). In an attempt to resolve the relationship between Hepatospora isolated from E. sinensis and C. pagurus, six additional gene sequences were mined from on-going unpublished genome projects (RNA polymerase, arginyl tRNA synthetase, prolyl tRNA synthetase, chitin synthase, beta tubulin and heat shock protein 70). Primers were designed based on the above gene sequences to analyse Hepatospora isolated from pea crab. Despite application of gene sequences to concatenated phylogenies, we were unable to discriminate Hepatospora isolates obtained from these hosts and concluded that they likely represent a single species or, at least subspecies thereof. In this instance, concatenated phylogenetic analysis supported the SSU-based phylogeny, and further, demonstrated that microsporidian taxonomies based upon morphology alone are unreliable, even at the level of the species. Our data, together with description of H. eriocheir in Asian crab farms, reveal a preponderance for microvariants of this parasite to infect the gut of a wide array of decapods crustacean hosts and the potential for Hepatospora to exist as a cline across wide geographies and habitats.

Information

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Crown Copyright. Published by Cambridge University Press 2016 
Figure 0

Table 1. Comparison of host and structure [histological, electron microscopy and molecular data (SSU 18s rRNA)] from the Hepatospora isolates

Figure 1

Table 2. Gene-specific primers were designed using the first and last 18 nucleotides of the selected orthologues from H. eriocheir

Figure 2

Table 3. rDNA primers used in this study

Figure 3

Fig. 1. (A) Histopathology of Hepatospora sp. in the hepatopancreas of E. sinensis. Scale = 50 µm. (B) Histopathology of H. eriocheir in the hepatopancreas of Cancer pagurus. Scale = 100 µm. (C) Histopathology of Hepatospora sp. in the hepatopancreas of P. pisum. Scale = 25 µm. Tubule epithelial cells contained multiple granular inclusions (arrows) All images H&E histology.

Figure 4

Fig. 2. Electron micrographs of H. eriocheir from E. sinensis (A and B) and Hepatospora sp. from Cancer pagurus (C and D) and P. pisum (E and F). (A) Developing sporonts within a parasitophorous vesicle. Sporonts contain multiple unikaryotic nuclei (arrows) which then divide and mature to form spores. Scale bar = 500 nm. (B) Mature spore containing seven to eight turns of the polar filament (arrow) in single file, unikaryotic nucleus (uni), anchoring disc (a) and polaroplast (p). Scale bar = 100 nm. (C) Developing sporonts within a parasitophorous vesicle. Sporonts contain multiple diplokaryotic nuclei (*) which then divide and mature to form spores. Scale bar = 0·5 µm. (D) Mature spore containing five to six turns of the polar filament (arrow) in single file, diplokaryotic nucleus (dip), anchoring disc (a) and polaroplast (p). Scale bar = 0·2 µm. (E) Developing sporonts within a parasitophorous vesicle. Sporonts contain multiple diplokaryotic nuclei (*) which then divide and mature to form spores. Scale bar = 500 nm. (F) Mature spore containing five to six turns of the polar filament (arrow) in single file, diplokaryotic nucleus (dip), anchoring disc (a) and polaroplast (p). Scale bar = 100 nm.

Figure 5

Fig. 3. Neighbour – joining tree based on a 511 bp nucleotide partial SSU 18s sequence from parasites isolated from hepatopancreas of E. sinensis (H. eriocheir), Cancer pagurus (Hepatospora sp.) and P. pisum. The phylogenetic analysis was performed using Mega version 5·05. Analysis was done using 1000 bootstrapped datasets and values >70% are shown on the tree. The scale bar represents substitutions per nucleotide site.

Figure 6

Fig. 4. Grouping of three Hepatospora/Hepatospora-like species suggests they are closely related. Phylogenetic trees based on (A.) maximum likelihood, (B.) Bayesian inference of 20 microsporidians for six concatenated genes rooted with S. cerevisiae. Numbers on nodes are (A.) Bootstrap confidence levels from 100 replicates, (B.) Bayesian posterior probability values. Both trees displaying identical topologies and grouping of Hepatospora/Hepatospora-like clade are shown in bold. The scale bars represent nucleotide substitutions per site.

Figure 7

Table 4. High nucleotide sequence similarity of the six marker genes used in this study between the parasites isolated from three different crab hosts