Laboratory of Genetics, Wageningen University & Research, Droevendaalsesteeg 1, 6708PB Wageningen, the Netherlands.
Laboratory of Genetics, Wageningen University & Research, Droevendaalsesteeg 1, 6708PB Wageningen, the Netherlands.
Curr Biol. 2021 Oct 11;31(19):4413-4421.e5. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2021.07.070. Epub 2021 Aug 16.
The ancestor of termites relied on gut symbionts for degradation of plant material, an association that persists in all termite families. However, the single-lineage Macrotermitinae has additionally acquired a fungal symbiont that complements digestion of food outside the termite gut. Phylogenetic analysis has shown that fungi grown by these termites form a clade-the genus Termitomyces-but the events leading toward domestication remain unclear. To address this, we reconstructed the lifestyle of the common ancestor of Termitomyces using a combination of ecological data with a phylogenomic analysis of 21 related non-domesticated species and 25 species of Termitomyces. We show that the closely related genera Blastosporella and Arthromyces also contain insect-associated species. Furthermore, the genus Arthromyces produces asexual spores on the mycelium, which may facilitate insect dispersal when growing on aggregated subterranean fecal pellets of a plant-feeding insect. The sister-group relationship between Arthromyces and Termitomyces implies that insect association and asexual sporulation, present in both genera, preceded the domestication of Termitomyces and did not follow domestication as has been proposed previously. Specialization of the common ancestor of these two genera on an insect-fecal substrate is further supported by similar carbohydrate-degrading profiles between Arthromyces and Termitomyces. We describe a set of traits that may have predisposed the ancestor of Termitomyces toward domestication, with each trait found scattered in related taxa outside of the termite-domesticated clade. This pattern indicates that the origin of the termite-fungus symbiosis may not have required large-scale changes of the fungal partner.
白蚁的祖先是依靠肠道共生体来降解植物物质的,这种共生关系在所有白蚁科中都存在。然而,单系的Macrotermitinae 还额外获得了一种真菌共生体,这种共生体补充了白蚁肠道外食物的消化。系统发育分析表明,这些白蚁生长的真菌形成了一个分支——Termitomyces 属,但导致驯化的事件仍不清楚。为了解决这个问题,我们使用生态数据与对 21 种相关非驯化种和 25 种 Termitomyces 种的系统基因组分析相结合,重建了 Termitomyces 常见祖先的生活方式。我们表明,密切相关的 Blastosporella 和 Arthromyces 属也包含与昆虫有关的物种。此外,Arthromyces 属在菌丝上产生无性孢子,当在植物食性昆虫的聚集地下粪便颗粒上生长时,可能有助于昆虫的传播。Arthromyces 和 Termitomyces 之间的姐妹群关系意味着昆虫的共生和无性孢子的形成,这在两个属中都存在,先于 Termitomyces 的驯化,而不是像以前提出的那样随着驯化而出现。这两个属的共同祖先对昆虫-粪便基质的专门化进一步得到了 Arthromyces 和 Termitomyces 之间相似的碳水化合物降解模式的支持。我们描述了一组可能使 Termitomyces 祖先易于驯化的特征,这些特征在白蚁驯化分支之外的相关分类群中都有发现。这种模式表明,白蚁-真菌共生关系的起源可能不需要真菌伙伴的大规模变化。