Microbiomes of a specialist caterpillar are consistent across different habitats but also resemble the local soil microbial communities.

IF 5.5 3区 材料科学 Q2 CHEMISTRY, PHYSICAL
Sofia I F Gomes, Anna M Kielak, S Emilia Hannula, Robin Heinen, Renske Jongen, Ivor Keesmaat, Jonathan R De Long, T Martijn Bezemer
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引用次数: 18

Abstract

Background: Insect-associated microorganisms can provide a wide range of benefits to their host, but insect dependency on these microbes varies greatly. The origin and functionality of insect microbiomes is not well understood. Many caterpillars can harbor symbionts in their gut that impact host metabolism, nutrient uptake and pathogen protection. Despite our lack of knowledge on the ecological factors driving microbiome assemblages of wild caterpillars, they seem to be highly variable and influenced by diet and environment. Several recent studies have shown that shoot-feeding caterpillars acquire part of their microbiome from the soil. Here, we examine microbiomes of a monophagous caterpillar (Tyria jacobaeae) collected from their natural host plant (Jacobaea vulgaris) growing in three different environments: coastal dunes, natural inland grasslands and riverine grasslands, and compare the bacterial communities of the wild caterpillars to those of soil samples collected from underneath each of the host plants from which the caterpillars were collected.

Results: The microbiomes of the caterpillars were dominated by Proteobacteria, Actinobacteria, Firmicutes and Bacteroidetes. Only 5% of the total bacterial diversity represented 86.2% of the total caterpillar's microbiome. Interestingly, we found a high consistency of dominant bacteria within the family Burkholderiaceae in all caterpillar samples across the three habitats. There was one amplicon sequence variant belonging to the genus Ralstonia that represented on average 53% of total community composition across all caterpillars. On average, one quarter of the caterpillar microbiome was shared with the soil.

Conclusions: We found that the monophagous caterpillars collected from fields located more than 100 km apart were all dominated by a single Ralstonia. The remainder of the bacterial communities that were present resembled the local microbial communities in the soil in which the host plant was growing. Our findings provide an example of a caterpillar that has just a few key associated bacteria, but that also contains a community of low abundant bacteria characteristic of soil communities.

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

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一种专业毛毛虫的微生物群落在不同的栖息地是一致的,但也类似于当地的土壤微生物群落。
背景:昆虫相关微生物可以为其宿主提供广泛的益处,但昆虫对这些微生物的依赖性差异很大。昆虫微生物群的起源和功能尚不清楚。许多毛虫可以在肠道内庇护共生体,影响宿主的代谢、营养吸收和病原体保护。尽管我们对驱动野生毛毛虫微生物群组合的生态因素缺乏了解,但它们似乎是高度可变的,并受到饮食和环境的影响。最近的几项研究表明,以芽为食的毛虫从土壤中获得部分微生物群。在这里,我们研究了从生长在三种不同环境(沿海沙丘、天然内陆草原和河流草原)的天然寄主植物(Jacobaea vulgaris)中收集的单食毛虫(Tyria jacobaeae)的微生物群落,并将野生毛虫的细菌群落与从每种寄主植物下收集的土壤样本进行了比较。结果:毛虫的微生物群以变形菌门、放线菌门、厚壁菌门和拟杆菌门为主。仅5%的细菌多样性代表了毛虫总微生物群的86.2%。有趣的是,我们在三个栖息地的所有毛毛虫样本中发现了伯克霍尔德科优势细菌的高度一致性。有一个扩增子序列变异属于Ralstonia属,平均占所有毛虫群落组成的53%。平均而言,四分之一的毛毛虫微生物群与土壤共享。结论:在相隔100 km以上的野外采集到的单食毛虫均以一种拉尔斯顿虫为主。其余的细菌群落与寄主植物生长的土壤中的微生物群落相似。我们的发现提供了一个毛虫的例子,它只有几个关键的相关细菌,但它也包含一个低丰度的细菌群落,这是土壤群落的特征。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
ACS Applied Energy Materials
ACS Applied Energy Materials Materials Science-Materials Chemistry
CiteScore
10.30
自引率
6.20%
发文量
1368
期刊介绍: ACS Applied Energy Materials is an interdisciplinary journal publishing original research covering all aspects of materials, engineering, chemistry, physics and biology relevant to energy conversion and storage. The journal is devoted to reports of new and original experimental and theoretical research of an applied nature that integrate knowledge in the areas of materials, engineering, physics, bioscience, and chemistry into important energy applications.
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