Chen Xiaoming, Yang Zixiang, Chen Hang, Qi Qian, Liu Juan, Wang Chao, Shao Shuxia, Lu Qin, Li Yang, Wu Haixia, King-Jones Kirst, Chen Ming-Shun
Research Institute of Resource Insects, Chinese Academy of Forestry, Kunming, China.
Key Laboratory of Breeding and Utilization of Resource Insects of State Forestry Administration, Kunming, China.
Front Plant Sci. 2020 Jul 7;11:811. doi: 10.3389/fpls.2020.00811. eCollection 2020.
It has been a long-standing question as to whether the interaction between gall-forming insects and their host plants is merely parasitic or whether it may also benefit the host. On its host , the aphid induces the formation of closed galls, referred to as horned galls. Typically, mature aphid populations comprise thousands of individuals, which is sufficient to cause the accumulation of high CO levels in galls (on average 8-fold higher and up to 16 times than atmospheric levels). Large aphid populations also excrete significant amounts of honeydew, a waste product high in sugars. Based on C isotope tracing and genomic analyses, we showed that aphid-derived carbon found in CO and honeydew was recycled in gall tissues via photosynthesis and glycometabolism. These results indicated that the aphid-gall system evolved in a manner that allowed nutrient recycling, where the gall provides nutrients to the growing aphid population, and in turn, aphid-derived carbon metabolites provide a resource for the growth of the gall. The metabolic efficiency of this self-circulating system indicates that the input needed from the host plant to maintain aphid population growth less than previously thought and possibly minimal. Aside from the recycling of nutrients, we also found that gall metabolites were transported to other parts of the host plant and is particularly beneficial for leaves growing adjacent to the gall. Taken together, galls in the - system are highly specialized structures that serve as a metabolic and nutrient exchange hub that benefits both the aphid and its host plant. As such, host plants provide both shelter and nutrients to protect and sustain aphid populations, and in return, aphid-derived metabolites are channeled back to the host plant and thus provide a certain degree of "metabolic compensation" for their caloric and structural needs.
形成虫瘿的昆虫与其寄主植物之间的相互作用仅仅是寄生关系,还是也可能对寄主有益,这一直是个长期存在的问题。在其寄主上,这种蚜虫会诱导形成封闭的虫瘿,称为角状虫瘿。通常,成熟的蚜虫群体由数千只个体组成,这足以导致虫瘿中积累高浓度的二氧化碳(平均比大气水平高8倍,最高可达16倍)。大量的蚜虫群体还会分泌大量的蜜露,蜜露是一种含糖量很高的废物。基于碳同位素示踪和基因组分析,我们发现,在二氧化碳和蜜露中发现的蚜虫来源的碳通过光合作用和糖代谢在虫瘿组织中循环利用。这些结果表明,蚜虫 - 虫瘿系统的进化方式允许营养物质循环利用,即虫瘿为不断增长的蚜虫群体提供营养,反过来,蚜虫来源的碳代谢产物为虫瘿的生长提供资源。这种自我循环系统的代谢效率表明,寄主植物维持蚜虫群体生长所需的投入比之前认为的要少,甚至可能极少。除了营养物质的循环利用,我们还发现虫瘿代谢产物会运输到寄主植物的其他部位,对与虫瘿相邻生长的叶片尤其有益。综上所述,该系统中的虫瘿是高度特化的结构,作为代谢和营养交换中心,对蚜虫及其寄主植物都有益。因此,寄主植物为蚜虫提供庇护所和营养物质以保护和维持蚜虫群体,作为回报,蚜虫来源的代谢产物会回馈给寄主植物,从而为其热量和结构需求提供一定程度的“代谢补偿”。