Estes Anne M, Hearn David J, Snell-Rood Emilie C, Feindler Michele, Feeser Karla, Abebe Tselotie, Dunning Hotopp Julie C, Moczek Armin P
Towson University, Department of Biological Sciences, Baltimore, Maryland, United States of America ; Institute for Genome Sciences, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2013 Nov 1;8(11):e79061. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0079061. eCollection 2013.
Insects feeding on plant sap, blood, and other nutritionally incomplete diets are typically associated with mutualistic bacteria that supplement missing nutrients. Herbivorous mammal dung contains more than 86% cellulose and lacks amino acids essential for insect development and reproduction. Yet one of the most ecologically necessary and evolutionarily successful groups of beetles, the dung beetles (Scarabaeinae) feeds primarily, or exclusively, on dung. These associations suggest that dung beetles may benefit from mutualistic bacteria that provide nutrients missing from dung. The nesting behaviors of the female parent and the feeding behaviors of the larvae suggest that a microbiome could be vertically transmitted from the parental female to her offspring through the brood ball. Using sterile rearing and a combination of molecular and culture-based techniques, we examine transmission of the microbiome in the bull-headed dung beetle, Onthophagus taurus. Beetles were reared on autoclaved dung and the microbiome was characterized across development. A ~1425 bp region of the 16S rRNA identified Pseudomonadaceae, Enterobacteriaceae, and Comamonadaceae as the most common bacterial families across all life stages and populations, including cultured isolates from the 3(rd) instar digestive system. Finer level phylotyping analyses based on lepA and gyrB amplicons of cultured isolates placed the isolates closest to Enterobacter cloacae, Providencia stuartii, Pusillimonas sp., Pedobacter heparinus, and Lysinibacillus sphaericus. Scanning electron micrographs of brood balls constructed from sterile dung reveals secretions and microbes only in the chamber the female prepares for the egg. The use of autoclaved dung for rearing, the presence of microbes in the brood ball and offspring, and identical 16S rRNA sequences in both parent and offspring suggests that the O. taurus female parent transmits specific microbiome members to her offspring through the brood chamber. The transmission of the dung beetle microbiome highlights the maintenance and likely importance of this newly-characterized bacterial community.
以植物汁液、血液和其他营养成分不完整的食物为食的昆虫通常与能补充缺失营养的共生细菌有关。食草哺乳动物的粪便含有超过86%的纤维素,且缺乏昆虫发育和繁殖所必需的氨基酸。然而,蜣螂(金龟子科)是生态上最不可或缺且进化上最成功的甲虫类群之一,它们主要或完全以粪便为食。这些关联表明,蜣螂可能受益于能提供粪便中缺失营养的共生细菌。雌性亲代的筑巢行为和幼虫的取食行为表明,微生物群落可能通过育儿球从亲代雌性垂直传递给后代。我们采用无菌饲养以及基于分子和培养的技术相结合的方法,研究了牛头蜣螂(食粪金龟)微生物群落的传递情况。将甲虫饲养在高压灭菌的粪便上,并对其发育过程中的微生物群落进行了特征分析。16S rRNA的一个约1425 bp区域确定假单胞菌科、肠杆菌科和丛毛单胞菌科是所有生命阶段和种群中最常见的细菌家族,包括来自三龄幼虫消化系统的培养分离株。基于培养分离株的lepA和gyrB扩增子进行的更精细水平的系统发育分析将这些分离株定位为最接近阴沟肠杆菌、斯氏普罗威登斯菌、微小单胞菌属、肝素杆菌和球形赖氨酸芽孢杆菌。用无菌粪便构建的育儿球的扫描电子显微镜图像显示,只有在雌性为卵准备的腔室中有分泌物和微生物。使用高压灭菌的粪便进行饲养、育儿球和后代中存在微生物,以及亲代和后代中16S rRNA序列相同,表明食粪金龟雌性亲代通过育儿室将特定的微生物群落成员传递给后代。蜣螂微生物群落的传递凸显了这个新鉴定的细菌群落的维持及其可能的重要性。