Microbial Brokers of Insect-Plant Interactions Revisited

被引:88
作者
Douglas, Angela E. [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Cornell Univ, Dept Entomol, Ithaca, NY 13853 USA
[2] Cornell Univ, Dept Mol Biol & Genet, Ithaca, NY 13853 USA
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
Insect-plant interactions; Microbial brokers; Microbiota; Symbiosis; ENDOSYMBIOTIC BACTERIA; MEDIATED INTERACTIONS; NITROGEN-FIXATION; ESCHERICHIA-COLI; HIGH-THROUGHPUT; GUT MICROBIOTA; CELL; SYMBIONTS; EVOLUTION; GENOME;
D O I
10.1007/s10886-013-0308-x
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Recent advances in sequencing methods have transformed the field of microbial ecology, making it possible to determine the composition and functional capabilities of uncultured microorganisms. These technologies have been instrumental in the recognition that resident microorganisms can have profound effects on the phenotype and fitness of their animal hosts by modulating the animal signaling networks that regulate growth, development, behavior, etc. Against this backdrop, this review assesses the impact of microorganisms on insect-plant interactions, in the context of the hypothesis that microorganisms are biochemical brokers of plant utilization by insects. There is now overwhelming evidence for a microbial role in insect utilization of certain plant diets with an extremely low or unbalanced nutrient content. Specifically, microorganisms enable insect utilization of plant sap by synthesizing essential amino acids. They also can broker insect utilization of plant products of extremely high lignocellulose content, by enzymatic breakdown of complex plant polysaccharides, nitrogen fixation, and sterol synthesis. However, the experimental evidence for microbial-mediated detoxification of plant allelochemicals is limited. The significance of microorganisms as brokers of plant utilization by insects is predicted to vary, possibly widely, as a result of potentially complex interactions between the composition of the microbiota and the diet and insect developmental age or genotype. For every insect species feeding on plant material, the role of resident microbiota as biochemical brokers of plant utilization is a testable hypothesis.
引用
收藏
页码:952 / 961
页数:10
相关论文
共 88 条
[1]   CELLULASE OF FUNGUS-GROWING TERMITES - NEW HYPOTHESIS ON ITS ORIGIN [J].
ABOKHATWA, N .
EXPERIENTIA, 1978, 34 (05) :559-560
[2]   Mountain Pine Beetles Colonizing Historical and Naive Host Trees Are Associated with a Bacterial Community Highly Enriched in Genes Contributing to Terpene Metabolism [J].
Adams, Aaron S. ;
Aylward, Frank O. ;
Adams, Sandye M. ;
Erbilgin, Nadir ;
Aukema, Brian H. ;
Currie, Cameron R. ;
Suen, Garret ;
Raffa, Kenneth F. .
APPLIED AND ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY, 2013, 79 (11) :3468-3475
[3]   Phylogenetic, Metabolic, and Taxonomic Diversities Shape Mediterranean Fruit Fly Microbiotas during Ontogeny [J].
Aharon, Yael ;
Pasternak, Zohar ;
Ben Yosef, Michael ;
Behar, Adi ;
Lauzon, Carol ;
Yuval, Boaz ;
Jurkevitch, Edouard .
APPLIED AND ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY, 2013, 79 (01) :303-313
[4]   Constitutive and induced subterranean plant volatiles attract both entomopathogenic and plant parasitic nematodes [J].
Ali, Jared G. ;
Alborn, Hans T. ;
Stelinski, Lukasz L. .
JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY, 2011, 99 (01) :26-35
[5]   PHYLOGENETIC IDENTIFICATION AND IN-SITU DETECTION OF INDIVIDUAL MICROBIAL-CELLS WITHOUT CULTIVATION [J].
AMANN, RI ;
LUDWIG, W ;
SCHLEIFER, KH .
MICROBIOLOGICAL REVIEWS, 1995, 59 (01) :143-169
[6]   Critical role of gut microbiota in the production of biologically active, free catecholamines in the gut lumen of mice [J].
Asano, Yasunari ;
Hiramoto, Tetsuya ;
Nishino, Ryo ;
Aiba, Yuji ;
Kimura, Tae ;
Yoshihara, Kazufumi ;
Koga, Yasuhiro ;
Sudo, Nobuyuki .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-GASTROINTESTINAL AND LIVER PHYSIOLOGY, 2012, 303 (11) :G1288-G1295
[7]   Hessian Fly-Associated Bacteria: Transmission, Essentiality, and Composition [J].
Bansal, Raman ;
Hulbert, Scot ;
Schemerhorn, Brandi ;
Reese, John C. ;
Whitworth, R. Jeff ;
Stuart, Jeffrey J. ;
Chen, Ming-Shun .
PLOS ONE, 2011, 6 (08)
[8]   Enterobacteria-mediated nitrogen fixation in natural populations of the fruit fly Ceratitis capitata [J].
Behar, A ;
Yuval, B ;
Jurkevitch, E .
MOLECULAR ECOLOGY, 2005, 14 (09) :2637-2643
[9]   Plant sterols and host plant suitability for a phloem-feeding insect [J].
Behmer, Spencer T. ;
Grebenok, Robert J. ;
Douglas, Angela E. .
FUNCTIONAL ECOLOGY, 2011, 25 (03) :484-491
[10]   Insect sterol nutrition and physiology: A global overview [J].
Behmer, ST ;
Nes, WD .
ADVANCES IN INSECT PHYSIOLOGY, VOL 31, 2003, 31 :1-72