Mansonella ozzardi and Mansonella perstans, filarial parasites infecting millions of people worldwide, harbor their unique obligate endosymbionts, the alpha-proteobacteria Wolbachia wMoz and wMpe, respectively. Currently, little is known about these Wolbachia and no genome sequences are available. In the current study, high quality draft genomes of wMoz and wMpe were assembled from complex clinical samples using a metagenome assembly and binning approach. These represent the first genomes from supergroup F Wolbachia originating from human parasites and share features characteristic of filarial as well arthropod Wolbachia, consistent with their position in supergroup F. Metagenomic data analysis was also used to estimate Wolbachia titers, which revealed wide variation in levels across different clinical isolates, addressing the contradicting reports on presence or absence of Wolbachia in M. perstans. These findings may have implications for the use antibiotics to treat mansonellosis. The wMoz and wMpe genome sequences provide a valuable resource for further studies on symbiosis, evolution and drug discovery.
The painted apple moth (PAM), Teia anartoides (Walker) (Lepidoptera: Lymantriidae) made a recent incursion into New Zealand. A nucleopolyhedrovirus (NPV), Orgyia anartoides NPV (OranNPV), originally isolated from PAM in Australia, was tested for its pathogenicity to PAM and a range of non‐target insect species found in New Zealand, to evaluate its suitability as a microbial control for this insect invader. Dosage‐mortality tests showed that OranNPV was highly pathogenic to PAM larvae; mean LT50 values for third instars ranged from 17.9 to 8.1 days for doses from 102 to 105 polyhedral inclusion bodies/larva, respectively. The cause of death in infected insects was confirmed as OranNPV. Molecular analysis established that OranNPV can be identified by PCR and restriction digestion, and this process complemented microscopic examination of infected larvae. No lymantriid species occur in New Zealand; however, the virus had no significant effects on species from five other lepidopteran families (Noctuidae, Tortricidae, Geometridae, Nymphalidae and Plutellidae) or on adult honeybees. Thus, all indications from this initial investigation are that OranNPV would be an important tool in the control of PAM in a future incursion of this species into New Zealand.
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