Assis Diego Santana, Kakazu Sérgio, da Cruz Mateus Oliveira, da Silva Raphael Affonso Pereira, Marin Vitor Rodrigues, Ferro Milene, Sass Daiane Cristina, Rodrigues Andre, Bacci Maurício
Department of General and Applied Biology, Institute of Biosciences, São Paulo State University (UNESP), Rio Claro, São Paulo, Brazil.
Microbiol Spectr. 2025 Jun 3;13(6):e0218924. doi: 10.1128/spectrum.02189-24. Epub 2025 May 14.
The attinas, ants of the subtribe (Formicidae: Myrmicinae), colonize vast areas in the American continent. This impressive fitness depends on culturing mutualistic fungi in their "fungus gardens" to digest biomass. , a derived leafcutter attina, degrades plant biomass into polyols in their fungus gardens. The proposed strategic use of polyols to accumulate energy and preserve digestive fungal exoenzymes is a fascinating evolutionary development in ants. We found that polyol production is a conserved trait among derived and less derived attinas. However, , the mutualistic fungus of the more derived leafcutter ants, expresses an incomplete set of enzymes necessary to reduce carbohydrates to polyols compared to sp., the mutualistic fungus of less derived ants. Although ants search for and consume these polyols with lower priority than glucose, polyols are important for developing and sporulating antagonistic fungi living in the fungus gardens. Therefore, despite the massive and widespread production by the fungus garden and the proposed benefits, polyols do not attract or preferentially feed the ants but stimulate invading fungi. Thus, the production of polyols was not a decisive factor in attracting ants to establish mutualism with fungi but rather in spreading fungi that can threaten ant colonies. Ants' evolution mitigated this setback by increasing by-product diversity, minimizing polyol concentration, and switching to mutualistic fungi lacking the expression of critical enzymes for polyol biosynthesis.IMPORTANCEMicrobial communities are critical elements of biodiversity modulating life on Earth. Insects interact intensely with microorganisms to obtain nutrients. They also suffer from diseases caused by microbial infections. The present study is an example of how the different actors of a microbial community interact with each other and their insect hosts. We found that polyols produced by microbes that digest plant matter affect nutrition and facilitate infections in leafcutter ants. This knowledge is crucial for understanding ant-microbe interaction and controlling agricultural pest leafcutter ants.
阿蒂纳蚁属(蚁科:切叶蚁亚科)的蚂蚁分布于美洲大陆的广大区域。这种惊人的适应性依赖于在其“菌圃”中培育共生真菌以消化生物质。一种进化而来的切叶阿蒂纳蚁会在其菌圃中将植物生物质降解为多元醇。所提出的利用多元醇来积累能量和保存消化性真菌外切酶的策略性用途,是蚂蚁中一项引人入胜的进化发展。我们发现多元醇的产生是进化程度较高和较低的阿蒂纳蚁属的一个保守特征。然而,与进化程度较低的蚂蚁的共生真菌相比,进化程度较高的切叶蚁的共生真菌—— ,表达的将碳水化合物还原为多元醇所需的酶不完整。尽管蚂蚁寻找并食用这些多元醇的优先级低于葡萄糖,但多元醇对于生活在菌圃中的拮抗性真菌的发育和孢子形成很重要。因此,尽管菌圃大量广泛地产生多元醇并具有所提出的益处,但多元醇并不会吸引或优先供蚂蚁食用,而是刺激入侵真菌。因此,多元醇的产生并非吸引蚂蚁与真菌建立共生关系的决定性因素,而是在传播可能威胁蚁群的真菌方面起作用。蚂蚁通过增加副产物多样性、最小化多元醇浓度以及转向缺乏多元醇生物合成关键酶表达的共生真菌来缓解这一挫折。
重要性
微生物群落是调节地球上生命的生物多样性的关键要素。昆虫与微生物强烈相互作用以获取营养。它们也会遭受微生物感染引起的疾病。本研究是一个微生物群落的不同参与者如何相互作用以及与它们的昆虫宿主相互作用的例子。我们发现消化植物物质的微生物产生的多元醇会影响切叶蚁的营养并促进感染。这一知识对于理解蚂蚁与微生物的相互作用以及控制农业害虫切叶蚁至关重要。