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Featured researches published by Li-Ming Niu.


Genome Biology | 2013

Obligate mutualism within a host drives the extreme specialization of a fig wasp genome

Jin-Hua Xiao; Zhen Yue; Ling-Yi Jia; Xinhua Yang; Li-Hua Niu; Zhuo Wang; Peng Zhang; Bao-Fa Sun; Shun-Min He; Zi Li; Tuan-Lin Xiong; Wen Xin; Hai-Feng Gu; Bo Wang; John H. Werren; Robert W. Murphy; David Wheeler; Li-Ming Niu; Guang-Chang Ma; Ting Tang; Sheng-Nan Bian; Ning-Xin Wang; Chun-Yan Yang; Nan Wang; Yue-Guan Fu; Wen-Zhu Li; Soojin V. Yi; Xingyu Yang; Qing Zhou; Changxin Lu

BackgroundFig pollinating wasps form obligate symbioses with their fig hosts. This mutualism arose approximately 75 million years ago. Unlike many other intimate symbioses, which involve vertical transmission of symbionts to host offspring, female fig wasps fly great distances to transfer horizontally between hosts. In contrast, male wasps are wingless and cannot disperse. Symbionts that keep intimate contact with their hosts often show genome reduction, but it is not clear if the wide dispersal of female fig wasps will counteract this general tendency. We sequenced the genome of the fig wasp Ceratosolen solmsi to address this question.ResultsThe genome size of the fig wasp C. solmsi is typical of insects, but has undergone dramatic reductions of gene families involved in environmental sensing and detoxification. The streamlined chemosensory ability reflects the overwhelming importance of females finding trees of their only host species, Ficus hispida, during their fleeting adult lives. Despite long-distance dispersal, little need exists for detoxification or environmental protection because fig wasps spend nearly all of their lives inside a largely benign host. Analyses of transcriptomes in females and males at four key life stages reveal that the extreme anatomical sexual dimorphism of fig wasps may result from a strong bias in sex-differential gene expression.ConclusionsOur comparison of the C. solmsi genome with other insects provides new insights into the evolution of obligate mutualism. The draft genome of the fig wasp, and transcriptomic comparisons between both sexes at four different life stages, provide insights into the molecular basis for the extreme anatomical sexual dimorphism of this species.


PLOS ONE | 2010

Molecular approaches to identify cryptic species and polymorphic species within a complex community of fig wasps.

Jin-Hua Xiao; Ning-Xin Wang; Yanwei Li; Robert W. Murphy; Dong-Guang Wan; Li-Ming Niu; Hao-Yuan Hu; Yue-Guan Fu; Da-Wei Huang

Cryptic and polymorphic species can complicate traditional taxonomic research and both of these concerns are common in fig wasp communities. Species identification is very difficult, despite great effort and the ecological importance of fig wasps. Herein, we try to identify all chalcidoid wasp species hosted by one species of fig, using both morphological and molecular methods. We compare the efficiency of four different DNA regions and find that ITS2 is highly effective for species identification, while mitochondrial COI and Cytb regions appear less reliable, possibly due to the interference signals from either nuclear copies of mtDNA, i.e. NUMTs, or the effects of Wolbachia infections. The analyses suggest that combining multiple markers is the best choice for inferring species identifications as any one marker may be unsuitable in a given case.


Molecular Ecology Resources | 2012

Molecular approaches identify known species, reveal cryptic species and verify host specificity of Chinese Philotrypesis (Hymenoptera: Pteromalidae)

Mei-Jiao Zhou; Jin-Hua Xiao; Sheng-Nan Bian; Yanwei Li; Li-Ming Niu; Hao-Yuan Hu; Wen-Shan Wu; Robert W. Murphy; Da-Wei Huang

Philotrypesis, a major component of the fig wasp community (Hymenoptera: Pteromalidae), is a model taxon for studying male fighting and mating behaviour. Its extreme sexual dimorphism and male polymorphism render species identification uncertain and in‐depth research on its ecology, behaviour and other evolutionary topics challenging. The fig wasps’ enclosed habitat within the syconia makes their mating behaviour inaccessible, to the extent of matching conspecific females and males. In this study, we combine morphological and molecular analyses to identify species of Philotrypesis sampled from south China and to associate their extraordinarily dimorphic genders and labile male morphologies. Morphological evaluations of females identify 22 species and 28 male morphs. The mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase I and nuclear internal transcribed spacer 2 data detect 21 species using females, and 15 species among the males. Most of the males match the species as delimited by females. Both markers reveal cryptic species in P. quadrisetosa on Ficus vasculosa. Most species of wasps live on one species of fig but three species co‐occur in two hosts (F. microcarpa and F. benjamina), which indicates host switching.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Evolution and Expression Plasticity of Opsin Genes in a Fig Pollinator, Ceratosolen solmsi

Bo Wang; Jin-Hua Xiao; Sheng-Nan Bian; Li-Ming Niu; Robert W. Murphy; Da-Wei Huang

Figs and fig pollinators have co-evolved species-specific systems of mutualism. So far, it was unknown how visual opsin genes of pollinators have evolved in the light conditions inside their host figs. We cloned intact full-length mRNA sequences of four opsin genes from a species of fig pollinator, Ceratosolen solmsi, and tested for selective pressure and expressional plasticity of these genes. Molecular evolutionary analysis indicated that the four opsin genes evolved under different selective constraints. Subsets of codons in the two long wavelength sensitive opsin (LW1, LW2) genes were positively selected in ancestral fig pollinators. The ultraviolet sensitive opsin (UV) gene was under strong purifying selection, whereas a relaxation of selective constrains occurred on several amino acids in the blue opsin. RT-qPCR analysis suggested that female and male fig pollinators had different expression patterns possibly due to their distinct lifestyles and different responses to light within the syconia. Co-evolutionary history with figs might have influenced the evolution and expression plasticity of opsin genes in fig pollinators.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Adaptive evolution of the circadian gene timeout in insects

Hai-Feng Gu; Jin-Hua Xiao; Li-Ming Niu; Bo Wang; Guang-Chang Ma; Derek W. Dunn; Da-Wei Huang

Most insects harbor two paralogous circadian genes, namely timeout and timeless. However, in the Hymenoptera only timeout is present. It remains unclear whether both genes, especially timeout in hymenopteran insects, have distinct evolutionary patterns. In this study, we examine the molecular evolution of both genes in 25 arthropod species, for which whole genome data are available, with addition of the daily expression of the timeout gene in a pollinating fig wasp, Ceratosolen solmsi (Hymenoptera: Chalcidoidea: Agaonidae). Timeless is under stronger purifying selection than timeout, and timeout has positively selected sites in insects, especially in the Hymenoptera. Within the Hymenoptera, the function of timeout may be conserved in bees and ants, but still evolving rapidly in some wasps such as the chalcids. In fig wasps, timeout is rhythmically expressed only in females when outside of the fig syconium but arrhythmically in male and female wasps inside the syconium. These plastic gene expressions reflect adaptive differences of males and females to their environment.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Chaos of Wolbachia sequences inside the compact fig syconia of Ficus benjamina (Ficus: Moraceae)

Chun-Yan Yang; Jin-Hua Xiao; Li-Ming Niu; Guang-Chang Ma; James M. Cook; Sheng Nan Bian; Yue-Guan Fu; Da-Wei Huang

Figs and fig wasps form a peculiar closed community in which the Ficus tree provides a compact syconium (inflorescence) habitat for the lives of a complex assemblage of Chalcidoid insects. These diverse fig wasp species have intimate ecological relationships within the closed world of the fig syconia. Previous surveys of Wolbachia, maternally inherited endosymbiotic bacteria that infect vast numbers of arthropod hosts, showed that fig wasps have some of the highest known incidences of Wolbachia amongst all insects. We ask whether the evolutionary patterns of Wolbachia sequences in this closed syconium community are different from those in the outside world. In the present study, we sampled all 17 fig wasp species living on Ficus benjamina, covering 4 families, 6 subfamilies, and 8 genera of wasps. We made a thorough survey of Wolbachia infection patterns and studied evolutionary patterns in wsp (Wolbachia Surface Protein) sequences. We find evidence for high infection incidences, frequent recombination between Wolbachia strains, and considerable horizontal transfer, suggesting rapid evolution of Wolbachia sequences within the syconium community. Though the fig wasps have relatively limited contact with outside world, Wolbachia may be introduced to the syconium community via horizontal transmission by fig wasps species that have winged males and visit the syconia earlier.


Insect Science | 2010

High incidences and similar patterns of Wolbachia infection in fig wasp communities from three different continents

Lin-Lin Chen; James M. Cook; Hui Xiao; Hao-Yuan Hu; Li-Ming Niu; Da-Wei Huang

Abstract  Wolbachia are endosymbiotic bacteria that infect numerous arthropod species. Previous studies in Panama and Australia revealed that the majority of fig wasp species harbor Wolbachia infections, but that similar patterns of incidence have evolved independently with different wasp species and Wolbachia strains on the two continents. We found Wolbachia infections in 25/47 species (53%) of fig wasp associated with 25 species of Chinese figs. Phylogenetic analyses of Wolbachia wsp sequences indicated that very similar strains are not obviously found in either closely related or ecologically linked fig wasps species. The extremely high prevalence of Wolbachia in fig wasps (over 50% of species infected) is not constrained by geographical origin and is a recurrent theme of fig wasp/Wolbachia interactions.


BMC Genomics | 2014

Large proportion of genes in one cryptic WO prophage genome are actively and sex-specifically transcribed in a fig wasp species

Guan-Hong Wang; Li-Ming Niu; Guang-Chang Ma; Jin-Hua Xiao; Da-Wei Huang

BackgroundCryptic prophages are genetically defective in their induction and propagation, and are simply regarded as genetic remnants. There are several putative cryptic WO prophages in the sequenced Wolbachia genomes. Whether they are lytic is unclear and their functions are poorly understood. Only three open reading frames (ORFs) in cryptic WO prophages have been reported to be actively transcribed.ResultsIn this study, we comprehensively examined the transcription of the only cryptic WO prophage (WOSol) in a Wolbachia strain that infects a fig wasp, Ceratosolen solmsi (Agaonidae, Chalcidoidea). By analyzing the transcriptions of all the ORFs of WOSol in both sexes of C. solmsi, using qualitative and quantitative methods, we demonstrated that i) a high percentage of ORFs are actively transcribed (59%, 17/29); ii) the expression of these ORFs is highly sex-specific, with a strong male bias (three in females and 15 in males); iii) an ank (ankyrin-domain-containing) gene actively transcribed in both wasp sexes is more highly expressed in males.ConclusionsA large proportion of the genes in the cryptic WO prophage WOSol are expressed, which overturns the concept that cryptic prophages are simply genetically defective. The highly sex-specific expression patterns of these genes in the host suggest that they play important roles in Wolbachia biology and its reproductive manipulation of its insect host, particularly through the males.


Insect Molecular Biology | 2014

Odorant‐binding protein (OBP) genes affect host specificity in a fig–pollinator mutualistic system

Ning-Xin Wang; N. X. Wang; Li-Ming Niu; Sheng-Nan Bian; Jin-Hua Xiao; Da-Wei Huang

The interaction between figs and their pollinating wasps is regarded as a model system for studying specialized co‐evolved mutualism. Chemoreception of fig wasps plays an important role in this interaction, and odorant‐binding proteins (OBP) function in the first step of odorant detection. The OBP repertoire of the fig wasp Ceratosolen solmsi is reported to be one of the smallest among insects; however, it is unknown how these OBPs are related to the complicated mating process occurring within the fig cavity and the extreme host specificity of the species. In the present study, we combined a structural analysis of the conserved cysteine pattern and motif order, a phylogenetic analysis, and previous studies on ligand‐binding assays to deduce the function of OBPs. We also quantified the expression of OBP genes in different life stages of female and male fig wasps by using real‐time quantitative PCR, which can help to predict the function of these genes. The results indicated that CsolOBP1 and CsolOBP2 (or CsolOBP5) in males may bind to pheromones and play important roles in mate choice, whereas CsolOBP4 and CsolOBP5 may primarily function in host localization by females through binding of volatile compounds emitted by receptive figs.


Biology Letters | 2014

Evidence for the circadian gene period as a proximate mechanism of protandry in a pollinating fig wasp

Hai-Feng Gu; Jin-Hua Xiao; Derek W. Dunn; Li-Ming Niu; Bo Wang; Ling-Yi Jia; Da-Wei Huang

Protandry in insects is the tendency for adult males to emerge before females and usually results from intra-sexual selection. However, the genetic basis of this common phenomenon is poorly understood. Pollinating fig wasp (Agaonidae) larvae develop in galled flowers within the enclosed inflorescences (‘figs’) of fig trees. Upon emergence, males locate and mate with the still galled females. After mating, males release females from their galls to enable dispersal. Females cannot exit galls or disperse from a fig without male assistance. We sampled male and female Ceratosolen solmsi (the pollinator of Ficus hispida) every 3 h over a 24 h emergence period, and then measured the expression of five circadian genes: period (per), clock (clk), cycle (cyc), pigment-dispersing factor (pdf) and clockwork orange (cwo). We found significant male-biased sexual dimorphism in the expression of all five genes. per showed the greatest divergence between the sexes and was the only gene rhythmically expressed. Expression of per correlated closely with emergence rates at specific time intervals in both male and female wasps. We suggest that this rhythmical expression of per may be a proximate mechanism of protandry in this species.

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Da-Wei Huang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Jin-Hua Xiao

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Hao-Yuan Hu

Anhui Normal University

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Yue-Guan Fu

Chinese Academy of Tropical Agricultural Sciences

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Guang-Chang Ma

Chinese Academy of Tropical Agricultural Sciences

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Ning-Xin Wang

Shandong Agricultural University

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Sheng-Nan Bian

Shandong Agricultural University

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Ling-Yi Jia

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Bo Wang

Central University of Finance and Economics

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