Poff Kirsten E, Stever Heather, Reil Jonathan B, Seabourn Priscilla, Ching Alexander J, Aoki Sayaka, Logan Mitchel, Michalski Jennifer R, Santamaria Jessika, Adams Jesse W, Eiben Jesse A, Yew Joanne Y, Ewing Curtis P, Magnacca Karl N, Bennett Gordon M
Department of Plant and Environmental Protections Sciences, University of Hawaii at Manoa, 2500 Campus Rd., Honolulu, HI 96822, USA.
C-MAIKI Consortium, University of Hawaii at Manoa, 1991 East-West Rd., Honolulu, HI 96822, USA.
Insects. 2017 Dec 19;8(4):130. doi: 10.3390/insects8040130.
Insects associate with a diversity of microbes that can shape host ecology and diversity by providing essential biological and adaptive services. For most insect groups, the evolutionary implications of host-microbe interactions remain poorly understood. Geographically discrete areas with high biodiversity offer powerful, simplified model systems to better understand insect-microbe interactions. Hawaii boasts a diverse endemic insect fauna (~6000 species) characterized by spectacular adaptive radiations. Despite this, little is known about the role of bacteria in shaping this diversity. To address this knowledge gap, we inaugurate the Native Hawaiian Insect Microbiome Initiative (NHIMI). The NHIMI is an effort intended to develop a framework for informing evolutionary and biological studies in Hawaii. To initiate this effort, we have sequenced the bacterial microbiomes of thirteen species representing iconic, endemic Hawaiian insect groups. Our results show that native Hawaiian insects associate with a diversity of bacteria that exhibit a wide phylogenetic breadth. Several groups show predictable associations with obligate microbes that permit diet specialization. Others exhibit unique ecological transitions that are correlated with shifts in their microbiomes (e.g., transition to carrion feeding from plant-feeding in ). Finally, some groups, such as the Hawaiian , have relatively diverse microbiomes with a conserved core of bacterial taxa across multiple species and islands.
昆虫与多种微生物相关联,这些微生物可通过提供重要的生物学和适应性服务来塑造宿主的生态和多样性。对于大多数昆虫类群而言,宿主与微生物相互作用的进化意义仍知之甚少。具有高生物多样性的地理上离散的区域提供了强大且简化的模型系统,以更好地理解昆虫与微生物的相互作用。夏威夷拥有多样的本土昆虫区系(约6000种),其特点是有壮观的适应性辐射。尽管如此,关于细菌在塑造这种多样性中所起的作用却知之甚少。为了填补这一知识空白,我们启动了夏威夷本土昆虫微生物组计划(NHIMI)。NHIMI旨在建立一个框架,为夏威夷的进化和生物学研究提供信息。为启动这项工作,我们对代表标志性的夏威夷本土昆虫类群的13个物种的细菌微生物组进行了测序。我们的结果表明,夏威夷本土昆虫与多种细菌相关联,这些细菌具有广泛的系统发育广度。几个类群显示出与专性微生物的可预测关联,这些微生物允许饮食特化。其他类群则表现出独特的生态转变,这与它们微生物组的变化相关(例如,从以植物为食转变为以腐肉为食)。最后,一些类群,如夏威夷的[此处原文缺失具体昆虫名称],具有相对多样的微生物组,在多个物种和岛屿中存在一个保守的细菌分类群核心。