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Dynamic changes of gut bacterial communities present in larvae of Anoplophora glabripennies collected at different developmental stages
Authors:XueFei Wang  HuaLing Wang  XiaoYu Su  Jie Zhang  JiaWei Bai  JianYong Zeng  HuiPing Li
Institution:1. College of Forestry, Hebei Agricultural University, Hebei, China;2. College of Forestry, Hebei Agricultural University, Hebei, China

Hebei Urban Forest Health Technology Innovation Center, Hebei, China

Contribution: Funding acquisition (lead), Writing - review & editing (lead);3. College of Forestry, Hebei Agricultural University, Hebei, China

Hebei Urban Forest Health Technology Innovation Center, Hebei, China

Contribution: ?Investigation (lead);4. College of Forestry, Hebei Agricultural University, Hebei, China

Contribution: ?Investigation (equal);5. College of Forestry, Hebei Agricultural University, Hebei, China

Key Laboratory of Forest Germplasm Resources and Protection of Hebei Province, Hebei, China

Contribution: Writing - review & editing (equal)

Abstract:The Asian long-horned beetle, Anoplophora glabripennies (Motschulsky), is a destructive wood-boring pest that is capable of killing healthy trees. Gut bacteria in the larvae of the wood-boring pest is essential for the fitness of hosts. However, little is known about the structure of the intestinal microbiome of A. glabripennies during larval development. Here, we used Illumina MiSeq high-throughput sequencing technology to analyze the larval intestinal bacterial communities of A. glabripennies at the stages of newly hatched larvae, 1st instar larvae and 4th instar larvae. Significant differences were found in larval gut microbial community structure at different larvae developmental stages. Different dominant genus was detected during larval development. Acinetobacter were dominant in the newly hatched larvae, Enterobacter and Raoultella in the 1st instar larvae, and Enterococcus and Gibbsiella in the 4th instar larvae. The microbial richness in the newly hatched larvae was higher than those in the 1st and 4th instar larvae. Many important functions of the intestinal microbiome were predicted, for example, fermentation and chemoheterotrophy functions that may play an important role in insect growth and development was detected in the bacteria at all tested stages. However, some specific functions are found to be associated with different development stages. Our study provides a theoretical basis for investigating the function of the intestinal symbiosis bacteria of A. glabripennies.
Keywords:16S rRNA  Asian long-horned beetle  different life stages  gut microbiota
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