Host-symbiont co-speciation and reductive genome evolution in gut symbiotic bacteria of acanthosomatid stinkbugs |
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Authors: | Yoshitomo Kikuchi Takahiro Hosokawa Naruo Nikoh Xian-Ying Meng Yoichi Kamagata Takema Fukatsu |
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Affiliation: | (1) Institute for Biological Resources and Functions, National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST), 305-8566 Tsukuba, Japan;(2) Division of Natural Sciences, The Open University of Japan, 261-8586 Chiba, Japan;(3) Research Institute of Genome-based Biofactory, National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST), 305-8566 Tsukuba, Japan |
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Abstract: | Background Host-symbiont co-speciation and reductive genome evolution have been commonly observed among obligate endocellular insect symbionts, while such examples have rarely been identified among extracellular ones, the only case reported being from gut symbiotic bacteria of stinkbugs of the family Plataspidae. Considering that gut symbiotic communities are vulnerable to invasion of foreign microbes, gut symbiotic associations have been thought to be evolutionarily not stable. Stinkbugs of the family Acanthosomatidae harbor a bacterial symbiont in the midgut crypts, the lumen of which is completely sealed off from the midgut main tract, thereby retaining the symbiont in the isolated cryptic cavities. We investigated histological, ecological, phylogenetic, and genomic aspects of the unique gut symbiosis of the acanthosomatid stinkbugs. |
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