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蚂蚁腹部的微生物群落取决于蚁群成员身份而非蚁种等级,并且与蚁群生产力相关。

Abdominal microbial communities in ants depend on colony membership rather than caste and are linked to colony productivity.

作者信息

Segers Francisca H I D, Kaltenpoth Martin, Foitzik Susanne

机构信息

LOEWE Centre for Translational Biodiversity Genomics (LOEWE-TBG) Frankfurt Germany.

Behavioural Ecology and Social Evolution Institute of Organismic and Molecular Evolution Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz Germany.

出版信息

Ecol Evol. 2019 Nov 14;9(23):13450-13467. doi: 10.1002/ece3.5801. eCollection 2019 Dec.

Abstract

Gut bacteria aid their host in digestion and pathogen defense, and bacterial communities that differ in diversity or composition may vary in their ability to do so. Typically, the gut microbiomes of animals living in social groups converge as members share a nest environment and frequently interact. Social insect colonies, however, consist of individuals that differ in age, physiology, and behavior, traits that could affect gut communities or that expose the host to different bacteria, potentially leading to variation in the gut microbiome within colonies. Here we asked whether bacterial communities in the abdomen of ants, composed largely of the gut microbiome, differ between different reproductive and behavioral castes. We compared microbiomes of queens, newly eclosed workers, brood carers, and foragers by high-throughput 16S rRNA sequencing. Additionally, we sampled individuals from the same colonies twice, in the field and after 2 months of laboratory housing. To disentangle the effects of laboratory environment and season on microbial communities, additional colonies were collected at the same location after 2 months. There were no large differences between ant castes, although queens harbored more diverse microbial communities than workers. Instead, we found effects of colony, environment, and season on the abdominal microbiome. Interestingly, colonies with more diverse communities had produced more brood. Moreover, the queens' microbiome composition was linked to egg production. Although long-term coevolution between social insects and gut bacteria has been repeatedly evidenced, our study is the first to find associations between abdominal microbiome characteristics and colony productivity in social insects.

摘要

肠道细菌有助于宿主消化和抵御病原体,而多样性或组成不同的细菌群落,其执行这些功能的能力也可能有所不同。通常情况下,群居动物的肠道微生物群会趋于一致,因为群体成员共享巢穴环境并频繁互动。然而,社会性昆虫群落由年龄、生理和行为各异的个体组成,这些特征可能会影响肠道菌群,或者使宿主接触到不同的细菌,从而可能导致群落内肠道微生物群的差异。在这里,我们研究了主要由肠道微生物群组成的蚂蚁腹部细菌群落,在不同生殖和行为等级之间是否存在差异。我们通过高通量16S rRNA测序比较了蚁后、新羽化的工蚁、育幼蚁和觅食蚁的微生物群。此外,我们在野外和实验室饲养2个月后,对来自同一蚁群的个体进行了两次采样。为了区分实验室环境和季节对微生物群落的影响,在2个月后于同一地点采集了更多蚁群。尽管蚁后的微生物群落比工蚁的更多样化,但不同等级蚂蚁之间并没有太大差异。相反,我们发现蚁群、环境和季节对腹部微生物群有影响。有趣的是,群落更多样化的蚁群育幼量更多。此外,蚁后的微生物群组成与产卵量有关。虽然社会性昆虫与肠道细菌之间的长期共同进化已被反复证实,但我们的研究首次发现社会性昆虫腹部微生物群特征与蚁群生产力之间的关联。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/80ba/6912891/1b5bcf73ac52/ECE3-9-13450-g001.jpg

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