Enforced specificity of an animal symbiosis

Julian M Wagner, Jason H Wong, Jocelyn G Millar, Enes Haxhimali, Adrian Bruckner, Thomas H Naragon, James Q Boedicker, Joseph Parker
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Abstract

Insect diversification has been catalyzed by widespread specialization on novel hosts - a process underlying exceptional radiations of phytophagous beetles, lepidopterans, parasitoid wasps, and inordinate lineages of symbionts, predators and other trophic specialists. The strict fidelity of many such interspecies associations is posited to hinge on sensory tuning to host-derived cues, a model supported by studies of neural function in host-specific model species. Here, we investigated the sensory basis of symbiotic interactions between a myrmecophile rove beetle and its single, natural host ant species. We show that host cues trigger analogous behaviors in both ant and symbiont. Cuticular hydrocarbons - the ant's nestmate recognition pheromones - elicit partner recognition by the beetle and execution of ant grooming behavior, integrating the beetle into the colony via chemical mimicry. The beetle also follows host trail pheromones, permitting inter-colony dispersal. Remarkably, the rove beetle also performs its symbiotic behaviors with ant species separated by ~95 million years, and shows minimal preference for its natural host over non-host ants. Experimentally validated agent-based modeling supports a scenario in which specificity is enforced by physiological constraints on symbiont dispersal, and negative fitness interactions with alternative hosts, rather than via sensory tuning. Enforced specificity may be a pervasive mechanism of host range restriction of specialists embedded within host niches. Chance realization of latent compatibilities with alternative hosts may facilitate host switching, enabling deep-time persistence of obligately symbiotic lineages.
动物共生的强制特异性
昆虫的多样化是由对新宿主的广泛专一化催化的--这是植食性甲虫、鳞翅目昆虫、寄生蜂以及共生体、捕食者和其他营养专家的大量繁殖的基础。许多此类种间联系的严格保真度被认为取决于对宿主衍生线索的感官调谐,对宿主特异性模式物种神经功能的研究支持了这一模型。在这里,我们研究了一种嗜膜喙甲虫与其单一自然宿主蚂蚁之间共生互动的感官基础。我们发现,宿主线索会触发蚂蚁和共生体的类似行为。角质碳氢化合物--蚂蚁的巢友识别信息素--引起甲虫的伙伴识别和蚂蚁的梳理行为,通过化学模仿使甲虫融入蚁群。甲虫还能追踪宿主的踪迹信息素,从而实现蚁群间的传播。值得注意的是,喙甲虫还能与相隔约 9500 万年的蚂蚁物种进行共生行为,而且对其自然宿主的偏好极小,而对非宿主蚂蚁的偏好则很小。经过实验验证的基于代理的建模支持这样一种情景,即特异性是通过对共生体扩散的生理限制以及与替代宿主的负适应性相互作用来实现的,而不是通过感官调节来实现的。强制特异性可能是嵌入宿主壁龛中的专科生物限制宿主范围的一种普遍机制。与替代宿主的潜在兼容性的偶然实现可能会促进宿主转换,从而使强制性共生种系得以长期存在。
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