Diego Castillo Franco, Thomas Parmentier, Tessa Van de Walle, Emma Van Reempts, Wouter Dekoninck, Jonathan Romiguier, and Nicky Wybouw (2026)
Spiroplasma Display an Intricate Continuum of Infection Heterogeneity and Persistence in Myrmica Ants
Molecular Ecology, 2026; 35:e70341:1-15.
Many bacterial taxa evolved facultative symbiotic associations with insects and spread through host populations by horizontal
and maternal transmission. Co-infection at the individual host level may facilitate or constrain the spread of facultative symbi-
onts. Due to insufficiently detailed genotyping, co-infections of maternally transmitted symbionts often remain hidden, limit-
ing our understanding of (co-)infection dynamics. Spiroplasma bacteria exhibit multiple independent origins of symbiosis with
insects and have poorly understood patterns of transmission and co-infection. Here, we examined these traits of Spiroplasma
symbiosis using Myrmica ants, a system known for high frequencies of single Spiroplasma infections. Through exhaustive
genotyping of 75 colonies across seven Myrmica species, we uncovered multiple cryptic co-infections involving two distinct
Spiroplasma clades that display significantly different infection frequencies in workers. Within Myrmica ruginodis, infection
heterogeneity was contingent on ant caste and was lower in workers. Remarkably, the sMyr Spiroplasma variant infected four
Myrmica species and was widespread in queens and workers. We provide phylogenomic and functional genomic support for an
exceptionally stable symbiosis with maternally acquired sMyr, with a predicted infection persistence of seven million years in the
Myrmica scabrinodis species group. Our findings reveal that Spiroplasma can display complex infection heterogeneity and evolve
an evolutionary stable maternally acquired infection within insect hosts.
Peer Review, Open Access, PDF available, RBINS Collection(s)
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