Broderick Nichole A, Robinson Courtney J, McMahon Matthew D, Holt Jonathan, Handelsman Jo, Raffa Kenneth F
Department of Entomology, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI 53706, USA.
BMC Biol. 2009 Mar 4;7:11. doi: 10.1186/1741-7007-7-11.
Gut microbiota contribute to the health of their hosts, and alterations in the composition of this microbiota can lead to disease. Previously, we demonstrated that indigenous gut bacteria were required for the insecticidal toxin of Bacillus thuringiensis to kill the gypsy moth, Lymantria dispar. B. thuringiensis and its associated insecticidal toxins are commonly used for the control of lepidopteran pests. A variety of factors associated with the insect host, B. thuringiensis strain, and environment affect the wide range of susceptibilities among Lepidoptera, but the interaction of gut bacteria with these factors is not understood. To assess the contribution of gut bacteria to B. thuringiensis susceptibility across a range of Lepidoptera we examined larval mortality of six species in the presence and absence of their indigenous gut bacteria. We then assessed the effect of feeding an enteric bacterium isolated from L. dispar on larval mortality following ingestion of B. thuringiensis toxin.
Oral administration of antibiotics reduced larval mortality due to B. thuringiensis in five of six species tested. These included Vanessa cardui (L.), Manduca sexta (L.), Pieris rapae (L.) and Heliothis virescens (F.) treated with a formulation composed of B. thuringiensis cells and toxins (DiPel), and Lymantria dispar (L.) treated with a cell-free formulation of B. thuringiensis toxin (MVPII). Antibiotics eliminated populations of gut bacteria below detectable levels in each of the insects, with the exception of H. virescens, which did not have detectable gut bacteria prior to treatment. Oral administration of the Gram-negative Enterobacter sp. NAB3, an indigenous gut resident of L. dispar, restored larval mortality in all four of the species in which antibiotics both reduced susceptibility to B. thuringiensis and eliminated gut bacteria, but not in H. virescens. In contrast, ingestion of B. thuringiensis toxin (MVPII) following antibiotic treatment significantly increased mortality of Pectinophora gossypiella (Saunders), which was also the only species with detectable gut bacteria that lacked a Gram-negative component. Further, mortality of P. gossypiella larvae reared on diet amended with B. thuringiensis toxin and Enterobacter sp. NAB3 was generally faster than with B. thuringiensis toxin alone.
This study demonstrates that in some larval species, indigenous gut bacteria contribute to B. thuringiensis susceptibility. Moreover, the contribution of enteric bacteria to host mortality suggests that perturbations caused by toxin feeding induce otherwise benign gut bacteria to exert pathogenic effects. The interaction between B. thuringiensis and the gut microbiota of Lepidoptera may provide a useful model with which to identify the factors involved in such transitions.
肠道微生物群有助于宿主的健康,其微生物组成的改变可能导致疾病。此前,我们证明苏云金芽孢杆菌的杀虫毒素杀死舞毒蛾(Lymantria dispar)需要肠道内的原生细菌。苏云金芽孢杆菌及其相关的杀虫毒素常用于防治鳞翅目害虫。与昆虫宿主、苏云金芽孢杆菌菌株和环境相关的多种因素影响着鳞翅目昆虫广泛的易感性范围,但肠道细菌与这些因素之间的相互作用尚不清楚。为了评估肠道细菌对一系列鳞翅目昆虫对苏云金芽孢杆菌易感性的影响,我们检测了六种昆虫在有和没有其原生肠道细菌存在的情况下的幼虫死亡率。然后,我们评估了喂食从舞毒蛾分离出的一种肠道细菌对摄入苏云金芽孢杆菌毒素后幼虫死亡率的影响。
口服抗生素降低了所测试的六种昆虫中五种因苏云金芽孢杆菌导致的幼虫死亡率。其中包括用由苏云金芽孢杆菌细胞和毒素组成的制剂(敌宝)处理的小苎麻赤蛱蝶(Vanessa cardui)、烟草天蛾(Manduca sexta)、菜粉蝶(Pieris rapae)和烟芽夜蛾(Heliothis virescens),以及用苏云金芽孢杆菌毒素的无细胞制剂(MVPII)处理的舞毒蛾。抗生素使每种昆虫体内的肠道细菌数量减少到检测不到的水平,但烟芽夜蛾除外,其在处理前没有可检测到的肠道细菌。口服革兰氏阴性肠杆菌属的NAB3(舞毒蛾的一种原生肠道细菌)恢复了所有四种昆虫的幼虫死亡率,在这四种昆虫中,抗生素既降低了对苏云金芽孢杆菌的易感性又消除了肠道细菌,但对烟芽夜蛾无效。相反,抗生素处理后摄入苏云金芽孢杆菌毒素(MVPII)显著增加了棉铃虫(Pectinophora gossypiella)的死亡率,棉铃虫也是唯一一种有可检测到的肠道细菌且缺乏革兰氏阴性成分的物种。此外,在添加了苏云金芽孢杆菌毒素和肠杆菌属NAB3的饲料上饲养的棉铃虫幼虫的死亡率通常比单独使用苏云金芽孢杆菌毒素时更快。
本研究表明,在一些幼虫物种中,原生肠道细菌会影响对苏云金芽孢杆菌的易感性。此外,肠道细菌对宿主死亡率的影响表明,毒素摄入引起的扰动会使原本无害的肠道细菌发挥致病作用。苏云金芽孢杆菌与鳞翅目昆虫肠道微生物群之间的相互作用可能为识别参与此类转变的因素提供一个有用的模型。