Department of Bacteriology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2010 Jan 15;5(1):e8748. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0008748.
Mutualistic associations are shaped by the interplay of cooperation and conflict among the partners involved, and it is becoming increasingly clear that within many mutualisms multiple partners simultaneously engage in beneficial interactions. Consequently, a more complete understanding of the dynamics within multipartite mutualism communities is essential for understanding the origin, specificity, and stability of mutualisms. Fungus-growing ants cultivate fungi for food and maintain antibiotic-producing Pseudonocardia actinobacteria on their cuticle that help defend the cultivar fungus from specialized parasites. Within both ant-fungus and ant-bacterium mutualisms, mixing of genetically distinct strains can lead to antagonistic interactions (i.e., competitive conflict), which may prevent the ants from rearing multiple strains of either of the mutualistic symbionts within individual colonies. The success of different ant-cultivar-bacterium combinations could ultimately be governed by antagonistic interactions between the two mutualists, either as inhibition of the cultivar by Pseudonocardia or vice versa. Here we explore cultivar-Pseudonocardia antagonism by evaluating in vitro interactions between strains of the two mutualists, and find frequent antagonistic interactions both from cultivars towards Pseudonocardia and vice versa. To test whether such in vitro antagonistic interactions affect ant colonies in vivo, we performed sub-colony experiments using species of Acromyrmex leaf-cutting ants. We created novel ant-fungus-bacterium pairings in which there was antagonism from one, both, or neither of the ants' microbial mutualists, and evaluated the effect of directional antagonism on cultivar biomass and Pseudonocardia abundance on the cuticle of workers within sub-colonies. Despite the presence of frequent in vitro growth suppression between cultivars and Pseudonocardia, antagonism from Pseudonocardia towards the cultivar did not reduce sub-colony fungus garden biomass, nor did cultivar antagonism towards Pseudonocardia reduce bacteria abundance on the cuticle of sub-colony workers. Our findings suggest that inter-mutualist antagonism does not limit what combinations of cultivar and Pseudonocardia strains Acromyrmex fungus-growing ants can maintain within nests.
互利共生关系是由相关合作伙伴之间的合作和冲突相互作用形成的,越来越明显的是,在许多互利共生关系中,多个合作伙伴同时进行有益的相互作用。因此,更全面地了解多伙伴互利共生群落的动态对于理解互利共生的起源、特异性和稳定性至关重要。真菌养殖蚂蚁为了食物而培养真菌,并在它们的外骨骼上维持产生抗生素的拟诺卡氏放线菌,以帮助保护栽培真菌免受专门寄生虫的侵害。在蚂蚁-真菌和蚂蚁-细菌的互利共生关系中,遗传上不同菌株的混合会导致拮抗相互作用(即竞争冲突),这可能阻止蚂蚁在单个蚁群中同时培养任何一种共生体的多个菌株。不同的蚂蚁-栽培菌-细菌组合的成功最终可能受到两种共生体之间的拮抗相互作用的控制,要么是拟诺卡氏放线菌对栽培菌的抑制,要么反之。在这里,我们通过评估两种共生体菌株之间的体外相互作用来探索栽培菌-拟诺卡氏放线菌的拮抗作用,发现经常存在栽培菌对拟诺卡氏放线菌的拮抗作用,反之亦然。为了测试这种体外拮抗相互作用是否会影响活体蚂蚁群体,我们使用了几种切叶蚁进行亚群实验。我们创建了新的蚂蚁-真菌-细菌配对,其中有一种、两种或两种蚂蚁微生物共生体都存在拮抗作用,并评估了定向拮抗作用对亚群中工蚁的栽培菌生物量和拟诺卡氏放线菌在表皮上丰度的影响。尽管在栽培菌和拟诺卡氏放线菌之间存在频繁的体外生长抑制,但拟诺卡氏放线菌对栽培菌的拮抗作用并没有降低亚群真菌花园的生物量,也没有栽培菌对拟诺卡氏放线菌的拮抗作用降低亚群工蚁表皮上的细菌丰度。我们的研究结果表明,种间拮抗作用不会限制阿克里米克斯真菌养殖蚂蚁在巢内维持的栽培菌和拟诺卡氏放线菌菌株的组合。