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Microbiological characterization of gut symbiotic bacteria in a limited number of stinkbugs of the families Acanthosomatidae, Plataspidae, Pentatomidae, Scutelleridae, Parastrachiidae, Alydidae and Pyrrhocoridae has shown symbiotic association with midgut bacteria to be common in phytophagous taxa of these heteropteran insects. Here we investigated the midgut bacterial symbiont of Eucorysses grandis, a stinkbug of the family Scutelleridae. A specific gammaproteobacterium was consistently identified in insects from five different geographic origins. The bacterium was detected in 64 of 64 insects sampled from three host populations. Phylogenetic analyses revealed that the bacterium constitutes a distinct lineage in the Gammaproteobacteria, neither closely related to the gut symbiont of another scutellerid stinkbug, Cantao ocellatus, nor to gut symbionts of other stinkbugs. Diagnostic PCR, in situ hybridization and electron microscopy demonstrated that the bacterium is located extracelluarly, in the midgut fourth section, which possesses crypts. These results indicate that the primary gut symbionts have multiple evolutionary origins in the Scutelleridae. A Sodalis-allied facultative symbiont was also identified in some insects from natural populations. Biological aspects of the primary gut symbiont and the secondary Sodalis-allied symbiont are discussed.  相似文献   

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Evolutionary adaptations for the exploitation of nutritionally challenging or toxic host plants represent a major force driving the diversification of phytophagous insects. Although symbiotic bacteria are known to have essential nutritional roles for insects, examples of radiations into novel ecological niches following the acquisition of specific symbionts remain scarce. Here we characterized the microbiota across bugs of the family Pyrrhocoridae and investigated whether the acquisition of vitamin-supplementing symbionts enabled the hosts to diversify into the nutritionally imbalanced and chemically well-defended seeds of Malvales plants as a food source. Our results indicate that vitamin-provisioning Actinobacteria (Coriobacterium and Gordonibacter), as well as Firmicutes (Clostridium) and Proteobacteria (Klebsiella) are widespread across Pyrrhocoridae, but absent from the sister family Largidae and other outgroup taxa. Despite the consistent association with a specific microbiota, the Pyrrhocoridae phylogeny is neither congruent with a dendrogram based on the hosts'' microbial community profiles nor phylogenies of individual symbiont strains, indicating frequent horizontal exchange of symbiotic partners. Phylogenetic dating analyses based on the fossil record reveal an origin of the Pyrrhocoridae core microbiota in the late Cretaceous (81.2–86.5 million years ago), following the transition from crypt-associated beta-proteobacterial symbionts to an anaerobic community localized in the M3 region of the midgut. The change in symbiotic syndromes (that is, symbiont identity and localization) and the acquisition of the pyrrhocorid core microbiota followed the evolution of their preferred host plants (Malvales), suggesting that the symbionts facilitated their hosts'' adaptation to this imbalanced nutritional resource and enabled the subsequent diversification in a competition-poor ecological niche.  相似文献   

5.
Among the 372 phytophagous Hemiptera examined, 133 insects of 28 species (Coreidae 18, Pentatomidae 7, Pyrrhocoridae 2, Lygaeidae 1) were infected with trypanosomatids. Gut infections only were found in 68.4%, gut and salivary gland infections in 29.3% and salivary infections alone in 2.3%. Fifty-one cultures were isolated from 38 insects. Cultures were characterized by assay of certain ornithinc-arginine metabolism enzymes and by indirect immunofluorescence against monoclonal antibodies specific for Phytomonas spp. Ten cultures were identified as either Crithidia or Leptomonas. Twenty-one promastigote cultures had an enzyme pattern hitherto recorded only for Leishmania and 16 cultures were identified as Phytomonas.  相似文献   

6.
The cabbage bugs Eurydema rugosa Motschulsky and Eurydema dominulus (Scopoli) (Heteroptera: Pentatomidae: Strachiini) possess a number of crypts in a posterior region of the midgut, which are filled with bacterial symbiont cells. Here we characterized the gut symbionts of Eurydema stinkbugs using molecular phylogenetic and histological techniques. Specific gammaproteobacteria were consistently identified from the posterior midgut of E. rugosa representing nine populations and E. dominulus representing six populations, respectively. The bacterial 16S rRNA gene sequences were identical within the species but slightly different (98.2% sequence identity) between the species. Molecular phylogenetic analysis revealed that the Eurydema symbionts formed a well-defined monophyletic group in the Gammaproteobacteria. The symbionts were phylogenetically distinct from the gut symbionts of the stinkbug families Acanthosomatidae, Plataspidae, Parastrachiidae, Scutelleridae, and other pentatomid species, suggesting multiple evolutionary origins of the gut symbiotic bacteria among diverse stinkbugs. In situ hybridization confirmed that the symbiont is located in the cavity of the midgut crypts. Aposymbiotic insects of E. rugosa, which were produced by egg surface sterilization, were viable but suffered retarded growth, reduced body weight, and abnormal body color, suggesting the biological importance of the symbiont for the host.  相似文献   

7.
Many stinkbugs (Insecta: Hemiptera: Heteroptera) are associated with bacterial symbionts in a posterior region of the midgut. In these stinkbugs, adult females excrete symbiont-containing materials from the anus for transmission of the beneficial symbionts to their offspring. For ensuring the vertical symbiont transmission, a variety of female-specific elaborate traits at the cellular, morphological, developmental, and behavioral levels have been reported from diverse stinkbugs of the families Plataspidae, Urostylididae, Parastrachiidae, etc. Meanwhile, such elaborate female-specific traits for vertical symbiont transmission have been poorly characterized for the largest and economically important stinkbug family Pentatomidae. Here, we investigated the midgut symbiotic system of a pentatomid stinkbug, Plautia splendens. A specific gammaproteobacterial symbiont was consistently present extracellularly in the cavity of numerous crypts arranged in four rows on the midgut fourth section. The symbiont was smeared on the egg surface upon oviposition by adult females, orally acquired by newborn nymphs, and thereby transmitted vertically to the next generation and important for growth and survival of the host insects. We found that, specifically in adult females, several rows of crypts at the posterior end region of the symbiotic midgut were morphologically differentiated and conspicuously enlarged, often discharging the symbiotic bacteria from the crypt cavity to the main tract of the symbiotic midgut. The female-specific enlarged end crypts were also found in other pentatomid stinkbugs Plautia stali and Carbula crassiventris. These results suggest that the enlarged end crypts represent a female-specific specialized morphological trait for vertical symbiont transmission commonly found among stinkbugs of the family Pentatomidae.  相似文献   

8.
共生菌普遍存在于昆虫体内,它们能够为宿主昆虫提供生长发育所必需的氨基酸、固醇类等营养物质,还能提高昆虫适应高温、寄生虫、病毒等不利环境因素的能力,昆虫则为共生菌提供稳定的生存环境和营养物质,昆虫与共生菌相互依存。多数情况下,共生菌通过垂直传播在宿主代次间进行传播,即共生菌由母代传递给子代。结合最近几年相关研究,本文综述了不同昆虫共生菌的垂直传播模式。除极少数肠道共生菌通过污染卵壳被宿主幼虫取食得以垂直传播外,垂直传播的共生菌多为经卵传播。根据侵染时期的不同,共生菌经卵传播模式多数可分为以下4种:侵染宿主昆虫幼虫中的生殖干细胞、侵染宿主昆虫年轻雌成虫中的生殖干细胞、侵染宿主昆虫雌成虫中的成熟卵母细胞以及侵染宿主昆虫囊胚期胚胎。其中,有些共生菌是以共生菌菌胞整体侵染的方式进入到宿主卵巢。另外,少数肠道共生菌也通过卵巢进行垂直传播,此类共生菌先侵染卵巢侧输卵管并在侧输卵管聚集,待卵排放至侧输卵管时再进入到卵中。在文中,我们也探讨了昆虫共生菌垂直传播过程中的细胞机制和免疫机制,包括共生菌避开宿主免疫反应、共生菌通过内吞作用进入卵巢以及不同共生菌间的协同作用等。  相似文献   

9.
Carotenoids of 47 species of insects belonging to Hemiptera, including 16 species of Sternorrhyncha (aphids and a whitefly), 11 species of Auchenorrhyncha (planthoppers, leafhoppers, and cicadas), and 20 species of Heteroptera (stink bugs, assassin bugs, water striders, water scorpions, water bugs, and backswimmers), were investigated from the viewpoints of chemo-systematic and chemical ecology. In aphids, carotenoids belonging to the torulene biosynthetic pathway such as β-zeacarotene, β,ψ-carotene, and torulene, and carotenoids with a γ-end group such as β,γ-carotene and γ,γ-carotene were identified. Carotenoids belonging the torulene biosynthetic pathway and with a γ-end group were also present in water striders. On the other hand, β-carotene, β-cryptoxanthin, and lutein, which originated from dietary plants, were present in both stink bugs and leafhoppers. Assassin bugs also accumulated carotenoids from dietary insects. Trace amounts of carotenoids were detected in cicadas. Carotenoids of insects belonging to Hemiptera well-reflect their ecological life histories.  相似文献   

10.
The evolutionary and ecological success of many insects is attributed to mutualistic partnerships with bacteria that confer hosts with novel traits including food digestion, nutrient supplementation, detoxification of harmful compounds and defence against natural enemies. Dysdercus fasciatus firebugs (Hemiptera: Pyrrhocoridae), commonly known as cotton stainers, possess a simple but distinctive gut bacterial community including B vitamin‐supplementing Coriobacteriaceae symbionts. In addition, their guts are often infested with the intestinal trypanosomatid parasite Leptomonas pyrrhocoris (Kinetoplastida: Trypanosomatidae). In this study, using experimental bioassays and fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH), we report on the protective role of the D. fasciatus gut bacteria against L. pyrrhocoris. We artificially infected 2nd instars of dysbiotic and symbiotic insects with a parasite culture and measured parasite titres, developmental time and survival rates. Our results show that L. pyrrhocoris infection increases developmental time and slightly modifies the quantitative composition of the gut microbiota. More importantly, we found significantly higher parasite titres and a tendency towards lower survival rates in parasite‐infected dysbiotic insects compared to symbiotic controls, indicating that the gut bacteria successfully interfere with the establishment or proliferation of L. pyrrhocoris. The colonization of symbiotic bacteria on the peritrophic matrix along the gut wall, as revealed by FISH, likely acts as a barrier blocking parasite attachment or entry into the hemolymph. Our findings show that in addition to being nutritionally important, D. fasciatus’ gut bacteria complement the host's immune system in preventing parasite invasions and that a stable gut microbial community is integral for the host's health.  相似文献   

11.
MYCETOCYTE SYMBIOSIS IN INSECTS   总被引:17,自引:0,他引:17  
1. Non-pathogenic microorganisms, known as mycetocyte symbionts, are located in specialized 'mycetocyte' cells of many insects that feed on nutritionally unbalanced or poor diets. The insects include cockroaches, Cimicidae and Lygaeidae (Heteroptera), the Homoptera, Anoplura, the Diptera Pupiparia, some formicine ants and many beetles. 2. Most mycetocyte symbionts are prokaryotes and a great diversity of forms has been described. None has been cultured in vitro and their taxonomic position is obscure. Yeasts have been reported in Cerambycidae and Anobiidae (Coleoptera) and a few planthoppers. They are culturable and those in anobiids have been assigned to the genus Torulopsis. 3. The mycetocyte cells may be associated with the gut, lie free in the abdominal haemocoel or be embedded in the fat body of the insect. The mycetocytes are large polyploid cells which rarely divide and the symbionts are restricted to their cytoplasm. 4. The mycetocyte symbionts are transmitted maternally from one insect generation to the next. In many beetles (Anobiidae, Cerambycidae, Chrysomelidae and cleonine Curculionidae), the microoganisms are smeared onto the eggs and consumed by the hatching larvae. In other insects, they are transferred from mycetocytes to oocytes in the ovary, a process known as transovarial transmission. The details of transmission in the different insect groups vary with the age of the mother (adult, larva or embryo) at which symbiont transfer to the ovary is initiated; whether isolated symbionts or intact mycetocytes are transferred; and the site of entry of symbionts to the egg (anterior, posterior or apolar). 5. Within an individual insect, the biomass of symbionts varies in a regular fashion with age, weight and sex of the insect. Suppression of symbiont growth rate and lysis of 'excess' microorganisms may contribute to the regulation of symbionts (including freshly-isolated preparations of unculturable forms) are used to investigate interactions between the partners. However, some methods to obtain aposymbiotic insects (e.g. antibiotics and lysozyme) deleteriously affect certain insects and aposymbionts may differ from the symbiont-containing stocks from which they were derived. 7. The mycetocyte symbionts have been proposed to synthesize various nutrients required by the insect. The symbionts of beetles and haematophagous insects may provide B vitamins and those in cockroaches and the Homoptera essential amino acids. The role of symbionts in the sterol nutrition of insects is equivocal. 8. Mycetocyte symbionts may have evolved from gut symbionts or guest microorganisms. The association is monophyletic in cockroaches but polyphyletic in many groups, including the sucking lice, beetles and scale insects.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
The possiblity of suppressing the growth of Nocardia (Rhodococcus) rhodnii symbiont in the gut of Rhodnius prolixus by feeding the bugs on rabbits immunized against the bacterium, was investigated. Rabbits immunized with symbionts isolated from adult bugs and grown in vitro developed high antisymbiont titres (1,024-2,048) and showed no ill side effects. The log-phase growth of the symbionts was retarded in the gut of R. prolixus larvae fed on immunized rabbits. Both growth rate and maximal number of symbionts were lower in groups receiving treatment. Rate of development of bugs reared on immunized rabbits was slowed and their success in moulting was reduced.  相似文献   

13.
Here we present comparative data on the localization and identity of intracellular symbionts among the superfamily Lygaeoidea (Insecta: Hemiptera: Heteroptera: Pentatomomorpha). Five different lygaeoid species from the families Blissidae and Lygaeidae (sensu stricto; including the subfamilies Lygaeinae and Orsillinae) were analyzed. Fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) revealed that all the bugs studied possess paired bacteriomes that are differently shaped in the abdomen and harbor specific endosymbionts therein. The endosymbionts were also detected in female gonads and at the anterior poles of developing eggs, indicating vertical transmission of the endosymbionts via ovarial passage, in contrast to the posthatch symbiont transmission commonly found among pentatomoid bugs (Pentatomomorpha: Pentatomoidea). Phylogenetic analysis based on 16S rRNA and groEL genes showed that the endosymbionts of Ischnodemus sabuleti, Arocatus longiceps, Belonochilus numenius, Orsillus depressus, and Ortholomus punctipennis constitute at least four distinct clades in the Gammaproteobacteria. The endosymbiont phylogeny did not agree with the host phylogeny based on the mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase I (COI) gene, but there was a local cospeciating pattern within the subfamily Orsillinae. Meanwhile, the endosymbiont of Belonochilus numenius (Lygaeidae: Orsillinae), although harbored in paired bacteriomes as in other lygaeoid bugs of the related genera Nysius, Ortholomus, and Orsillus, was phylogenetically close to "Candidatus Rohrkolberia cinguli," the endosymbiont of Chilacis typhae (Lygaeoidea: Artheneidae), suggesting an endosymbiont replacement in this lineage. The diverse endosymbionts and the differently shaped bacteriomes may reflect independent evolutionary origins of the endosymbiotic systems among lygaeoid bugs.  相似文献   

14.
Conservation plantings of native wildflowers were established adjacent to highbush blueberry (Vaccinium corymbosum L.) fields to test the hypothesis that provision of resources for natural enemies increases their abundance in adjacent crop fields without increasing the abundance of pest insects. For two growing seasons, natural enemies and herbivorous insects were sampled in fields with flowering borders and in control fields where growers maintained standard mown grass perimeters. Insects were categorized according to their trophic level and their potential pest status, and their abundance was compared between years and between treatments. Syrphid flies (Diptera: Syrphidae) were significantly more abundant in fields with conservation strips, as were plant bugs (Hemiptera: Miridae), thrips (Thysanoptera: Thripidae), and hoppers (Hemiptera: Auchenorrhyncha). Aphids (Hemiptera: Aphididae), thrips, fruit flies (Diptera: Tephritidae), and pirate bugs (Hemiptera: Anthocoridae) decreased significantly in abundance from 2007 to 2008. Beneficial insect abundance in crop fields increased in the latter half of the season in both years and this increase was more pronounced in fields adjacent to conservation plantings. We discuss the implications of these findings for pest management and conservation of biodiversity in farmland.  相似文献   

15.
Hemipterans are characterized by the absence of the peritrophic membrane, an anatomical structure that envelopes the food bolus in the majority of insects. However, the microvillar membranes of many hemipteran midgut cells are not in direct contact with the food bolus, due to the existence of the so-called perimicrovillar membrane (PMM), which covers the microvilli extending into the gut lumen with dead ends. alpha-Glucosidase is a biochemical marker for PMM in the seed sucker bug Dysdercus peruvianus (Heteroptera: Pyrrhocoridae). In this article, we report that adults of the major hemipteran infra-orders (Sternorrhyncha, Auchenorrhyncha, and Heteroptera) have PMM and a major membrane bound alpha-glucosidase, which has properties similar to those of the D. peruvianus enzyme. A polyclonal antibody raised against the enzyme of D. peruvianus recognized the enzymes present in PMM from the above-mentioned hemipteran groups. The same antibody was also able of recognizing perimicrovillar alpha-glucosidase from thrips. No PMM nor membrane-bound alpha-glucosidase were found in Psocoptera and Phthiraptera midguts. This suggests that PMM and PMM-bound-alpha-glucosidase are widespread among insects of the order Hemiptera and of the sister order Thysanoptera. The data support the hypothesis that PMM may have originated in the Condylognatha (Paraneopteran taxon including Hemiptera and Thysanoptera) ancestral stock and are associated with plant sap feeding.  相似文献   

16.
Horizontal transmission of the insect symbiont Rickettsia is plant-mediated   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Bacteria in the genus Rickettsia, best known as vertebrate pathogens vectored by blood-feeding arthropods, can also be found in phytophagous insects. The presence of closely related bacterial symbionts in evolutionarily distant arthropod hosts presupposes a means of horizontal transmission, but no mechanism for this transmission has been described. Using a combination of experiments with live insects, molecular analyses and microscopy, we found that Rickettsia were transferred from an insect host (the whitefly Bemisia tabaci) to a plant, moved inside the phloem, and could be acquired by other whiteflies. In one experiment, Rickettsia was transferred from the whitefly host to leaves of cotton, basil and black nightshade, where the bacteria were restricted to the phloem cells of the plant. In another experiment, Rickettsia-free adult whiteflies, physically segregated but sharing a cotton leaf with Rickettsia-plus individuals, acquired the Rickettsia at a high rate. Plants can serve as a reservoir for horizontal transmission of Rickettsia, a mechanism which may explain the occurrence of phylogenetically similar symbionts among unrelated phytophagous insect species. This plant-mediated transmission route may also exist in other insect-symbiont systems and, since symbionts may play a critical role in the ecology and evolution of their hosts, serve as an immediate and powerful tool for accelerated evolution.  相似文献   

17.
Aerobic heterotrophic and facultative anaerobic bacteria were isolated from all developmental stages of the sugar beet root maggot, Tetanops myopaeformis (von R?der). Two distinct bacterial symbiotic relationships were observed. Serratia liquefaciens and Serratia marcescens were found to be associated with all developmental stages. Bacterial symbiont transmission occurred from one generation to the next. Symbionts were transferred from the male reproductive system to the female reproductive system, where both an internal infiltration of the egg chorion and an external smearing of the eggs occurred during oviposition. Pseudomonas maltophilia was found in association with the larval gut and the inner surface of the puparium. Electron microscopy of the inner puparial surface revealed symbionts within the chitinous wall. In vitro symbiont chitinase production was found, using both nephelometric (turbidimetric) and N-acetylglucosamine assays. A relationship appeared to exist between adult fly emergence and enzymatic chitin degradation of the puparium by the bacterial symbionts.  相似文献   

18.
The adaptation of herbivorous insects to new host plants is key to their evolutionary success in diverse environments. Many insects are associated with mutualistic gut bacteria that contribute to the host's nutrition and can thereby facilitate dietary switching in polyphagous insects. However, how gut microbial communities differ between populations of the same species that feed on different host plants remains poorly understood. Most species of Pyrrhocoridae (Hemiptera: Heteroptera) are specialist seed‐feeders on plants in the family Malvaceae, although populations of one species, Probergrothius angolensis, have switched to the very distantly related Welwitschia mirabilis plant in the Namib Desert. We first compared the development and survival of laboratory populations of Pr. angolensis with two other pyrrhocorids on seeds of Welwitschia and found only Pr. angolensis was capable of successfully completing its development. We then collected Pr. angolensis in Namibia from Malvaceae and Welwitschia host plants, respectively, to assess their bacterial and fungal community profiles using high‐throughput amplicon sequencing. Comparison with long‐term laboratory‐reared insects indicated stable associations of Pr. angolensis with core bacteria (Commensalibacter, Enterococcus, Bartonella and Klebsiella), but not with fungi or yeasts. Phylogenetic analyses of core bacteria revealed relationships to other insect‐associated bacteria, but also found new taxa indicating potential host‐specialized nutritional roles. Importantly, the microbial community profiles of bugs feeding on Welwitschia versus Malvaceae revealed stark and consistent differences in the relative abundance of core bacterial taxa that correlate with the host‐plant switch; we were able to reproduce this result through feeding experiments. Thus, a dynamic gut microbiota may provide a means for insect adaptation to new host plants in new environments when food plants are extremely divergent.  相似文献   

19.
林勇文  侯有明 《昆虫学报》2018,61(12):1488-1496
昆虫体外共生菌是指能在体外与宿主发生互利共生关系的微生物。体外共生菌虽然不如肠道微生物那样普遍存在于昆虫中,但也在宿主生长发育过程中扮演着重要的角色。昆虫体外共生菌一般寄生于昆虫体表或体内特异器官(如储菌器),在特定时期转移到植物组织中。体外共生菌产生的挥发物能作为宿主定位寄主植物的信号物质,能为宿主提供生长发育所需的营养物质,还参与了宿主体外免疫。对昆虫体外共生菌的研究,不仅能进一步揭示昆虫与微生物之间的互作关系,丰富昆虫共生菌的研究,还能从共生菌的角度探索害虫引诱剂和昆虫免疫豁免机制。本文对昆虫体外共生菌寄生方式、传播途径、对宿主的影响等研究成果进行了综述,旨在为害虫综合防控提供新思路。  相似文献   

20.
BACKGROUND: Bacteria of the genus Asaia have been recently recognized as secondary symbionts of different sugar-feeding insects, including the leafhopper Scaphoideus titanus, vector of Flavescence dorée phytoplasmas. Asaia has been shown to be localized in S. titanus gut, salivary glands and gonoducts and to be maternally transmitted to the progeny by an egg smearing mechanism. It is currently not known whether Asaia in S. titanus is transmitted by additional routes. We performed a study to evaluate if Asaia infection is capable of horizontal transmission via co-feeding and venereal routes. RESULTS: A Gfp-tagged strain of Asaia was provided to S. titanus individuals to trace the transmission pathways of the symbiotic bacterium. Co-feeding trials showed a regular transfer of bacterial cells from donors to recipients, with a peak of frequency after 72 hours of exposure, and with concentrations of the administrated strain growing over time. Venereal transmission experiments were first carried out using infected males paired with uninfected females. In this case, female individuals acquired Gfp-labelled Asaia, with highest infection rates 72-96 hours after mating and with increasing abundance of the tagged symbiont over time. When crosses between infected females and uninfected males were conducted, the occurrence of "female to male" transmission was observed, even though the transfer occurred unevenly. CONCLUSIONS: The data presented demonstrate that the acetic acid bacterial symbiont Asaia is horizontally transmitted among S. titanus individuals both by co-feeding and venereal transmission, providing one of the few direct demonstrations of such a symbiotic transfer in Hemiptera. This study contributes to the understanding of the bacterial ecology in the insect host, and indicates that Asaia evolved multiple pathways for the colonization of S. titanus body.  相似文献   

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