活酵母加速黑腹果蝇幼虫的发育

IF 2.8 2区 生物学 Q2 BIOLOGY Journal of Experimental Biology Pub Date : 2024-10-01 Epub Date: 2024-10-04 DOI:10.1242/jeb.247932
Yanira Jiménez-Padilla, Babafemi Adewusi, Marc-André Lachance, Brent J Sinclair
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引用次数: 0

摘要

昆虫肠道内有一个复杂的微生物群落,影响着宿主的生理、性能和行为。肠道微生物组的研究主要集中在细菌-宿主共生上,对酵母菌等其他类群的关注较少。我们发现,腋生黑腹果蝇(无微生物饲养)从卵到成虫的发育速度(约 13 天)比有天然微生物群的果蝇(约 11.5 天)慢。在这里,我们发现苍蝇的内脏中存在活的酵母菌并进行繁殖,通过给幼虫接种单一种类的酵母菌(Saccharomyces cerevisiae 或 Lachancea kluyveri)可以恢复快速的发育时间。营养补充剂(热处理杀死的酵母或必需维生素和氨基酸的混合物)可略微加快腋生蝇的发育速度(约 12.5 天),但与活酵母的效果不同。在前两期,这种加速似乎是由于额外的宏量营养素供应造成的,但在第三期,即大部分生长发生时,活酵母会增加摄食率,这意味着是由肠道-大脑轴介导的效应。因此,苍蝇与酵母菌之间的相互作用已从酵母菌作为食物扩展到酵母菌作为有益的交互共生体。
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Live yeasts accelerate Drosophila melanogaster larval development.

Insect guts house a complex community of microbes that affect host physiology, performance and behavior. Gut microbiome research has largely focused on bacteria-host symbioses and paid less attention to other taxa, such as yeasts. We found that axenic Drosophila melanogaster (reared free of microbes) develops from egg to adult more slowly (ca. 13 days) than those with a natural microbiota (ca. 11.5 days). Here, we showed that live yeasts are present and reproducing in the guts of flies and that the fast development time can be restored by inoculating larvae with a single yeast species (either Saccharomyces cerevisiae or Lachancea kluyveri). Nutritional supplements (either heat-killed yeasts, or a mix of essential vitamins and amino acids) slightly sped the development of axenic flies (to ca. 12.5 days), but not to the same extent as live yeasts. During the first two instars, this acceleration appears to result from additional macronutrient availability, but during the third instar, when most growth occurs, live yeasts increased feeding rate, implying an effect mediated by the gut-brain axis. Thus, the fly-yeast interaction extends beyond yeasts-as-food to yeasts as beneficial interactive symbionts.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.50
自引率
10.70%
发文量
494
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: Journal of Experimental Biology is the leading primary research journal in comparative physiology and publishes papers on the form and function of living organisms at all levels of biological organisation, from the molecular and subcellular to the integrated whole animal.
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