Aylward Frank O, Khadempour Lily, Tremmel Daniel M, McDonald Bradon R, Nicora Carrie D, Wu Si, Moore Ronald J, Orton Daniel J, Monroe Matthew E, Piehowski Paul D, Purvine Samuel O, Smith Richard D, Lipton Mary S, Burnum-Johnson Kristin E, Currie Cameron R
Department of Bacteriology, University of Wisconson-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin, United States of America; Great Lakes Bioenergy Research Center, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin, United States of America.
Biological Sciences Division, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, Richland, Washington, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2015 Aug 28;10(8):e0134752. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0134752. eCollection 2015.
Leaf-cutter ants are prolific and conspicuous constituents of Neotropical ecosystems that derive energy from specialized fungus gardens they cultivate using prodigious amounts of foliar biomass. The basidiomycetous cultivar of the ants, Leucoagaricus gongylophorus, produces specialized hyphal swellings called gongylidia that serve as the primary food source of ant colonies. Gongylidia also contain plant biomass-degrading enzymes that become concentrated in ant digestive tracts and are deposited within fecal droplets onto fresh foliar material as ants incorporate it into the fungus garden. Although the enzymes concentrated by L. gongylophorus within gongylidia are thought to be critical to the initial degradation of plant biomass, only a few enzymes present in these hyphal swellings have been identified. Here we use proteomic methods to identify proteins present in the gongylidia of three Atta cephalotes colonies. Our results demonstrate that a diverse but consistent set of enzymes is present in gongylidia, including numerous plant biomass-degrading enzymes likely involved in the degradation of polysaccharides, plant toxins, and proteins. Overall, gongylidia contained over three quarters of all biomass-degrading enzymes identified in the L. gongylophorus genome, demonstrating that the majority of the enzymes produced by this fungus for biomass breakdown are ingested by the ants. We also identify a set of 40 of these enzymes enriched in gongylidia compared to whole fungus garden samples, suggesting that certain enzymes may be particularly important in the initial degradation of foliar material. Our work sheds light on the complex interplay between leaf-cutter ants and their fungal symbiont that allows for the host insects to occupy an herbivorous niche by indirectly deriving energy from plant biomass.
切叶蚁是新热带生态系统中数量众多且引人注目的组成部分,它们从专门的真菌园获取能量,这些真菌园是它们利用大量叶片生物量培育而成的。蚂蚁培育的担子菌品种——球孢白僵菌,会产生一种名为菌核的特殊菌丝肿胀物,作为蚁群的主要食物来源。菌核还含有植物生物量降解酶,这些酶在蚂蚁消化道中浓缩,并随着蚂蚁将新鲜叶片材料纳入真菌园时,沉积在粪便滴中,附着在新鲜叶片材料上。尽管球孢白僵菌在菌核中浓缩的酶被认为对植物生物量的初始降解至关重要,但在这些菌丝肿胀物中发现的酶只有少数几种。在这里,我们使用蛋白质组学方法来鉴定三个切叶蚁蚁群的菌核中存在的蛋白质。我们的结果表明,菌核中存在一组多样但一致的酶,包括许多可能参与多糖、植物毒素和蛋白质降解的植物生物量降解酶。总体而言,菌核包含了在球孢白僵菌基因组中鉴定出的所有生物量降解酶的四分之三以上,这表明这种真菌产生的用于生物量分解的大多数酶被蚂蚁摄取。我们还鉴定出一组与整个真菌园样本相比在菌核中富集的40种此类酶,这表明某些酶在叶片材料的初始降解中可能特别重要。我们的工作揭示了切叶蚁与其真菌共生体之间复杂的相互作用,这种相互作用使宿主昆虫能够通过间接从植物生物量中获取能量来占据食草性生态位。