Insects and their antibiotic-producing bacteria

Matthew Hutchings, Barrie Wilkinson
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Abstract

Many, if not all, plants and animals form mutually beneficial symbioses (mutualisms) with microbes and a subset of these mutualisms are defensive, in which the host provides food and housing in return for defence against disease. These symbioses typically involve antibiotic-producing bacteria, the best known of which are filamentous actinomycetes in the genera Streptomyces and Pseudonocardia and unicellular species in the genus Pseudomonas. Such mutualisms are likely to be widespread in nature, but they are best characterised in insects, which provide experimentally tractable models for studying symbiosis and microbiome formation because they typically host less complex microbial communities. Here, we examine the mutualisms formed between insects and antibiotic-producing bacteria using well characterised examples, including digger wasps and their endosymbiotic Streptomyces species, attine ants and their mutualist Pseudonocardia species and Pedarus beetles with their pedarin-producing Pseudomonas species. We also discuss how searching such symbiotic niches can give insights into the evolution and functions of microbial specialised metabolites and provide new platforms for antibiotic discovery.
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昆虫及其产生抗生素的细菌
许多(如果不是全部的话)植物和动物与微生物形成互利共生(互惠关系),这些互惠关系的一部分是防御性的,其中宿主提供食物和住房,以换取对疾病的防御。这些共生关系通常涉及产生抗生素的细菌,其中最著名的是链霉菌属和假心菌属的丝状放线菌和假单胞菌属的单细胞物种。这种共生关系可能在自然界广泛存在,但它们在昆虫中得到了最好的表征,昆虫为研究共生关系和微生物组形成提供了实验上易于处理的模型,因为它们通常宿主不太复杂的微生物群落。在这里,我们研究了昆虫和产生抗生素的细菌之间形成的共生关系,使用了充分表征的例子,包括挖掘者黄蜂和它们的内共生链霉菌物种,蚂蚁和它们的共生伪心虫物种,以及裴达勒斯甲虫和它们的产生培达林的假单胞菌物种。我们还讨论了如何寻找这样的共生生态位可以深入了解微生物专门代谢物的进化和功能,并为抗生素的发现提供新的平台。
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