Section of Integrative Biology, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2010 Sep 10;5(9):e12668. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0012668.
Leafcutter ants depend on the cultivation of symbiotic Attamyces fungi for food, which are thought to be grown by the ants in single-strain, clonal monoculture throughout the hundreds to thousands of gardens within a leafcutter nest. Monoculture eliminates cultivar-cultivar competition that would select for competitive fungal traits that are detrimental to the ants, whereas polyculture of several fungi could increase nutritional diversity and disease resistance of genetically variable gardens.
METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Using three experimental approaches, we assessed cultivar diversity within nests of Atta leafcutter ants, which are most likely among all fungus-growing ants to cultivate distinct cultivar genotypes per nest because of the nests' enormous sizes (up to 5000 gardens) and extended lifespans (10-20 years). In Atta texana and in A. cephalotes, we resampled nests over a 5-year period to test for persistence of resident cultivar genotypes within each nest, and we tested for genetic differences between fungi from different nest sectors accessed through excavation. In A. texana, we also determined the number of Attamyces cells carried as a starter inoculum by a dispersing queens (minimally several thousand Attamyces cells), and we tested for genetic differences between Attamyces carried by sister queens dispersing from the same nest. Except for mutational variation arising during clonal Attamyces propagation, DNA fingerprinting revealed no evidence for fungal polyculture and no genotype turnover during the 5-year surveys.
CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Atta leafcutter ants can achieve stable, fungal monoculture over many years. Mutational variation emerging within an Attamyces monoculture could provide genetic diversity for symbiont choice (gardening biases of the ants favoring specific mutational variants), an analog of artificial selection.
切叶蚁依赖共生的 Attamyces 真菌来获取食物,这些真菌被认为是由蚂蚁在单个菌株、克隆的单培养物中种植的,这些单培养物存在于切叶蚁巢中的数以百计到数千个花园中。单培养消除了种间竞争,否则会选择对蚂蚁有害的竞争性真菌特性,而多种真菌的混合培养可以增加遗传变异的花园的营养多样性和抗病能力。
方法/主要发现:我们使用三种实验方法评估了 Atta 切叶蚁巢内的品种多样性,由于巢穴的巨大规模(多达 5000 个花园)和较长的寿命(10-20 年),这些切叶蚁最有可能在每个巢穴中种植不同的品种基因型,这是所有种植真菌的蚂蚁中最有可能的。在 Atta texana 和 A. cephalotes 中,我们在 5 年内重新取样了巢穴,以测试每个巢穴中驻留品种基因型的持久性,并测试了通过挖掘访问的不同巢穴区域的真菌之间的遗传差异。在 A. texana 中,我们还确定了一只传播的蚁后携带的 Attamyces 细胞作为起始接种物的数量(至少几千个 Attamyces 细胞),并测试了来自同一巢穴的传播的姐妹蚁后携带的 Attamyces 之间的遗传差异。除了在克隆的 Attamyces 繁殖过程中产生的突变变异外,DNA 指纹分析没有发现真菌混合培养的证据,也没有在 5 年的调查中发现基因型更替。
结论/意义:Atta 切叶蚁可以在多年内实现稳定的真菌单培养。在 Attamyces 单培养中出现的突变变异可能为共生体选择提供遗传多样性(蚂蚁的园艺偏向有利于特定的突变变体),这是人工选择的一种模拟。