Mutualisms Research Group, Max Planck Institute for Biology, Tübingen 72076, Germany.
Mutualisms Research Group, Max Planck Institute for Biology, Tübingen 72076, Germany; Amsterdam Institute for Life and Environment, Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam 1081 HV, the Netherlands.
Curr Biol. 2024 Apr 22;34(8):1621-1634.e9. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2024.01.070. Epub 2024 Feb 19.
Timing the acquisition of a beneficial microbe relative to the evolutionary history of its host can shed light on the adaptive impact of a partnership. Here, we investigated the onset and molecular evolution of an obligate symbiosis between Cassidinae leaf beetles and Candidatus Stammera capleta, a γ-proteobacterium. Residing extracellularly within foregut symbiotic organs, Stammera upgrades the digestive physiology of its host by supplementing plant cell wall-degrading enzymes. We observe that Stammera is a shared symbiont across tortoise and hispine beetles that collectively comprise the Cassidinae subfamily, despite differences in their folivorous habits. In contrast to its transcriptional profile during vertical transmission, Stammera elevates the expression of genes encoding digestive enzymes while in the foregut symbiotic organs, matching the nutritional requirements of its host. Despite the widespread distribution of Stammera across Cassidinae beetles, symbiont acquisition during the Paleocene (∼62 mya) did not coincide with the origin of the subfamily. Early diverging lineages lack the symbiont and the specialized organs that house it. Reconstructing the ancestral state of host-beneficial factors revealed that Stammera encoded three digestive enzymes at the onset of symbiosis, including polygalacturonase-a pectinase that is universally shared. Although non-symbiotic cassidines encode polygalacturonase endogenously, their repertoire of plant cell wall-degrading enzymes is more limited compared with symbiotic beetles supplemented with digestive enzymes from Stammera. Highlighting the potential impact of a symbiotic condition and an upgraded metabolic potential, Stammera-harboring beetles exploit a greater variety of plants and are more speciose compared with non-symbiotic members of the Cassidinae.
时机的收购有益的微生物相对于其宿主的进化历史可以揭示合作伙伴的自适应影响。在这里,我们调查了之间的Cassidinae 叶甲和 Candidatus Stammera capleta,γ-变形菌之间的专性共生的开始和分子进化。居住在细胞外的前肠共生器官,Stammera 通过补充植物细胞壁降解酶来提升其宿主的消化生理。我们观察到 Stammera 是一个共享的共生体在龟和 hispine 甲虫,共同构成了叶甲亚科,尽管它们在食草习惯上存在差异。与它在垂直传播过程中的转录谱相反,Stammera 在 foregut 共生器官中提高了编码消化酶的基因的表达,与宿主的营养需求相匹配。尽管 Stammera 在叶甲科甲虫中广泛分布,但共生体的获得并没有与亚科的起源相一致在古近纪(约 6200 万年前)。早期分化的谱系缺乏共生体和容纳它的专门器官。重建宿主有益因素的祖先状态表明,Stammera 在共生关系开始时编码了三种消化酶,包括普遍共享的多聚半乳糖醛酸酶-果胶酶。虽然非共生叶甲科内源编码多聚半乳糖醛酸酶,但与补充了来自 Stammera 的消化酶的共生甲虫相比,它们的植物细胞壁降解酶的 repertoire 更为有限。突出了共生条件和升级的代谢潜力的潜在影响,Stammera 携带的甲虫利用了更多种类的植物,并且比非共生的 Cassidinae 成员更加多样化。