Microbial Ecology Group, Department of Biology, Lund University, Ecology Building, Solvegatan 37, SE-22362, Lund, Sweden.
Front Zool. 2012 Jun 6;9(1):13. doi: 10.1186/1742-9994-9-13.
In wood-dwelling fungus-farming weevils, the so-called ambrosia beetles (Curculionidae: Scolytinae and Platypodinae), wood in the excavated tunnels is used as a medium for cultivating fungi by the combined action of digging larvae (which create more space for the fungi to grow) and of adults sowing and pruning the fungus. The beetles are obligately dependent on the fungus that provides essential vitamins, amino acids and sterols. However, to what extent microbial enzymes support fungus farming in ambrosia beetles is unknown. Here we measure (i) 13 plant cell-wall degrading enzymes in the fungus garden microbial consortium of the ambrosia beetle Xyleborinus saxesenii, including its primary fungal symbionts, in three compartments of laboratory maintained nests, at different time points after gallery foundation and (ii) four specific enzymes that may be either insect or microbially derived in X. saxesenii adult and larval individuals.
We discovered that the activity of cellulases in ambrosia fungus gardens is relatively small compared to the activities of other cellulolytic enzymes. Enzyme activity in all compartments of the garden was mainly directed towards hemicellulose carbohydrates such as xylan, glucomannan and callose. Hemicellulolytic enzyme activity within the brood chamber increased with gallery age, whereas irrespective of the age of the gallery, the highest overall enzyme activity were detected in the gallery dump material expelled by the beetles. Interestingly endo-β-1,3(4)-glucanase activity capable of callose degradation was identified in whole-body extracts of both larvae and adult X. saxesenii, whereas endo-β-1,4-xylanase activity was exclusively detected in larvae.
Similar to closely related fungi associated with bark beetles in phloem, the microbial symbionts of ambrosia beetles hardly degrade cellulose. Instead, their enzyme activity is directed mainly towards comparatively more easily accessible hemicellulose components of the ray-parenchyma cells in the wood xylem. Furthermore, the detection of xylanolytic enzymes exclusively in larvae (which feed on fungus colonized wood) and not in adults (which feed only on fungi) indicates that only larvae (pre-) digest plant cell wall structures. This implies that in X. saxesenii and likely also in many other ambrosia beetles, adults and larvae do not compete for the same food within their nests - in contrast, larvae increase colony fitness by facilitating enzymatic wood degradation and fungus cultivation.
在木质穴居菌食性象甲中,所谓的粉状粒象甲(象甲科:小蠹科和扁甲科)通过幼虫(为真菌生长创造更多空间)和成虫播种和修剪真菌的共同作用,将挖掘出的隧道中的木材用作培养真菌的媒介。这些甲虫完全依赖于为其提供必需维生素、氨基酸和固醇的真菌。然而,微生物酶在粉食性象甲的真菌养殖中起到了何种程度的支持作用尚不清楚。在这里,我们测量了实验室维持巢穴中 Xyleborinus saxesenii 的真菌园微生物共生体的(i)13 种植物细胞壁降解酶,包括其主要真菌共生体,以及在画廊建立后的不同时间点的巢穴的三个隔室中,以及(ii)在 X. saxesenii 成虫和幼虫个体中可能来自昆虫或微生物的四种特定酶。
与其他纤维素酶相比,我们发现粉食性真菌园中的纤维素酶活性相对较小。花园所有隔室中的酶活性主要针对半纤维素碳水化合物,如木聚糖、葡甘露聚糖和几丁质。育雏室中的半纤维素酶活性随画廊年龄的增加而增加,而不论画廊的年龄如何,在甲虫排出的画廊倾倒物中检测到的总体酶活性最高。有趣的是,我们在 X. saxesenii 的幼虫和成虫的整个生物体提取物中鉴定出能够降解几丁质的内切-β-1,3(4)-葡聚糖酶活性,而内切-β-1,4-木聚糖酶活性仅在幼虫中检测到。
与木质部中的树皮象甲相关的密切相关真菌类似,粉食性象甲的微生物共生体几乎不降解纤维素。相反,它们的酶活性主要针对木材木质部射线-薄壁细胞中相对更容易获得的半纤维素成分。此外,仅在幼虫(以真菌定殖的木材为食)中检测到木聚糖酶,而在成虫(仅以真菌为食)中未检测到,这表明只有幼虫(预先)消化植物细胞壁结构。这意味着在 X. saxesenii 中,可能在许多其他粉食性象甲中,成虫和幼虫在其巢穴中不会争夺相同的食物——相反,幼虫通过促进酶促木材降解和真菌培养来提高群体适应性。