Aylward Frank O, Suen Garret, Biedermann Peter H W, Adams Aaron S, Scott Jarrod J, Malfatti Stephanie A, Glavina del Rio Tijana, Tringe Susannah G, Poulsen Michael, Raffa Kenneth F, Klepzig Kier D, Currie Cameron R
Department of Bacteriology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin, USA.
Insect Symbiosis Research Group, Max Planck Institute for Chemical Ecology, Jena, Germany.
mBio. 2014 Nov 18;5(6):e02077. doi: 10.1128/mBio.02077-14.
The ability to cultivate food is an innovation that has produced some of the most successful ecological strategies on the planet. Although most well recognized in humans, where agriculture represents a defining feature of civilization, species of ants, beetles, and termites have also independently evolved symbioses with fungi that they cultivate for food. Despite occurring across divergent insect and fungal lineages, the fungivorous niches of these insects are remarkably similar, indicating convergent evolution toward this successful ecological strategy. Here, we characterize the microbiota of ants, beetles, and termites engaged in nutritional symbioses with fungi to define the bacterial groups associated with these prominent herbivores and forest pests. Using culture-independent techniques and the in silico reconstruction of 37 composite genomes of dominant community members, we demonstrate that different insect-fungal symbioses that collectively shape ecosystems worldwide have highly similar bacterial microbiotas comprised primarily of the genera Enterobacter, Rahnella, and Pseudomonas. Although these symbioses span three orders of insects and two phyla of fungi, we show that they are associated with bacteria sharing high whole-genome nucleotide identity. Due to the fine-scale correspondence of the bacterial microbiotas of insects engaged in fungal symbioses, our findings indicate that this represents an example of convergence of entire host-microbe complexes.
The cultivation of fungi for food is a behavior that has evolved independently in ants, beetles, and termites and has enabled many species of these insects to become ecologically important and widely distributed herbivores and forest pests. Although the primary fungal cultivars of these insects have been studied for decades, comparatively little is known of their bacterial microbiota. In this study, we show that diverse fungus-growing insects are associated with a common bacterial community composed of the same dominant members. Furthermore, by demonstrating that many of these bacteria have high whole-genome similarity across distantly related insect hosts that reside thousands of miles apart, we show that these bacteria are an important and underappreciated feature of diverse fungus-growing insects. Because of the similarities in the agricultural lifestyles of these insects, this is an example of convergence between both the life histories of the host insects and their symbiotic microbiota.
种植食物的能力是一项创新,它产生了地球上一些最成功的生态策略。虽然在人类中最为人所熟知,农业是文明的一个决定性特征,但蚂蚁、甲虫和白蚁物种也独立地与它们为获取食物而培育的真菌形成了共生关系。尽管这种现象出现在不同的昆虫和真菌谱系中,但这些昆虫的真菌食性生态位却非常相似,这表明朝着这种成功的生态策略发生了趋同进化。在这里,我们对与真菌形成营养共生关系的蚂蚁、甲虫和白蚁的微生物群进行了特征描述,以确定与这些重要食草动物和森林害虫相关的细菌类群。使用非培养技术和对优势群落成员的37个复合基因组进行计算机重建,我们证明,在全球范围内共同塑造生态系统的不同昆虫 - 真菌共生关系具有高度相似的细菌微生物群,主要由肠杆菌属、拉恩菌属和假单胞菌属组成。尽管这些共生关系跨越了三个昆虫目和两个真菌门,但我们表明它们与具有高全基因组核苷酸同一性的细菌相关联。由于参与真菌共生的昆虫的细菌微生物群在精细尺度上具有对应关系,我们的研究结果表明,这代表了整个宿主 - 微生物复合体趋同的一个例子。
为获取食物而培育真菌的行为在蚂蚁、甲虫和白蚁中独立进化,使这些昆虫中的许多物种成为具有重要生态意义且分布广泛的食草动物和森林害虫。尽管对这些昆虫的主要真菌培育品种已经研究了几十年,但对它们的细菌微生物群了解相对较少。在这项研究中,我们表明,多种培育真菌的昆虫与由相同优势成员组成的共同细菌群落相关联。此外,通过证明许多这些细菌在相隔数千英里的远缘昆虫宿主中具有高全基因组相似性,我们表明这些细菌是多种培育真菌的昆虫的一个重要但未得到充分认识的特征。由于这些昆虫农业生活方式的相似性,这是宿主昆虫及其共生微生物群生活史趋同的一个例子。