Mohr Kathrin I, Tebbe Christoph C
Institut für Agrarökologie, Bundesforschungsanstalt für Landwirtschaft (FAL), Braunschweig, Germany.
Environ Microbiol. 2006 Feb;8(2):258-72. doi: 10.1111/j.1462-2920.2005.00893.x.
The gut of insects may harbour one of the largest reservoirs of a yet unexplored microbial diversity. To understand how specific insects select for their own bacterial communities, the structural diversity and variability of bacteria found in the gut of different bee species was analysed. For three successive years, adults and larvae of Apis mellifera ssp. carnica (honey bee), and Bombus terrestris (bumble bee), as well as larvae of Osmia bicornis (red mason bee) were collected at a flowering oilseed rape field. Total DNA was extracted from gut material and the bacterial diversity was analysed, independent of cultivation, by genetic profiling with single-strand conformation polymorphism (SSCP) of polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-amplified partial 16S rRNA genes. The SSCP profiles were specific for all bee species and for larvae and adults. Qualitative and quantitative differences were found in the bacterial community structure of larvae and adults of A. mellifera, but differences in B. terrestris were mainly quantitative. Sequencing of the PCR products revealed a dominance of Alpha-, Beta-, and Gammaproteobacteria, Bacteroidetes, and Firmicutes in all bee species. Single-strand conformation polymorphism profiles suggested a higher abundance and diversity of lactobacilli in adults of A. mellifera than in larvae. Further phylogenetic analyses indicated common bacterial phylotypes for all three bee species, e.g. those related to Simonsiella, Serratia, and Lactobacillus. Clades related to Delftia acidovorans, Pseudomonas aeruginosa or Lactobacillus intestinalis only contained sequences from larvae. Several of the bee-specific clusters also contained identical or highly similar sequences from bacteria detected in other A. mellifera subspecies from South Africa, suggesting the existence of cosmopolitan gut bacteria in bees.
昆虫的肠道可能是尚未被探索的微生物多样性的最大储存库之一。为了了解特定昆虫如何选择自身的细菌群落,分析了不同蜜蜂物种肠道中细菌的结构多样性和变异性。连续三年,在一片开花的油菜田采集了卡尼鄂拉蜂(蜜蜂)、熊蜂和红壁蜂的成虫及幼虫。从肠道样本中提取总DNA,通过对聚合酶链反应(PCR)扩增的部分16S rRNA基因进行单链构象多态性(SSCP)基因分析,独立于培养过程来分析细菌多样性。SSCP图谱对所有蜜蜂物种以及幼虫和成虫都具有特异性。在意大利蜜蜂的幼虫和成虫的细菌群落结构中发现了定性和定量的差异,但熊蜂的差异主要是定量的。PCR产物测序显示,所有蜜蜂物种中α-变形菌纲、β-变形菌纲、γ-变形菌纲、拟杆菌门和厚壁菌门占主导地位。单链构象多态性图谱表明,意大利蜜蜂成虫中乳酸杆菌的丰度和多样性高于幼虫。进一步的系统发育分析表明,所有三种蜜蜂物种都有共同的细菌系统型,例如那些与纤毛菌属、沙雷氏菌属和乳酸杆菌属相关的细菌。与食酸戴尔福特菌、铜绿假单胞菌或肠道乳酸杆菌相关的进化枝仅包含幼虫的序列。几个蜜蜂特异性簇还包含来自南非其他意大利蜜蜂亚种中检测到的细菌的相同或高度相似的序列,这表明蜜蜂中存在世界性的肠道细菌。