4.5 Article

Concerted impacts of antiherbivore defenses and opportunistic Serratia pathogens on the fall armyworm (Spodopterafrugiperda)

Journal

OECOLOGIA
Volume 198, Issue 1, Pages 167-178

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00442-021-05072-w

Keywords

Bacteria; Commensal; Digestion; Lepidoptera; Microbiome; Resistance

Categories

Funding

  1. United States Department of Agriculture NIFA Postdoctoral Fellowship [2018-67012-27979]
  2. US Department of Agriculture AFRI Grant [2017-67013-26596]
  3. Hatch Project Grant [PEN04576]
  4. US Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service

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The study evaluated the pathogenic tendencies of Serratia isolated from the digestive system of healthy fall armyworm larvae and its interaction with plant defenses. Results indicate that plants can facilitate the emergence of pathobionts within the gut of fall armyworm, with resident gut bacteria able to switch from a commensal to pathogenic lifestyle.
Insects frequently confront different microbial assemblages. Bacteria inhabiting an insect gut are often commensal, but some can become pathogenic when the insect is compromised from different stressors. Herbivores are often confronted by various forms of plant resistance, but how defenses generate opportunistic microbial infections from residents in the gut are not well understood. In this study, we evaluated the pathogenic tendencies of Serratia isolated from the digestive system of healthy fall armyworm larvae (Spodopterafrugiperda) and how it interfaces with plant defenses. We initially selected Serratia strains that varied in their direct expression of virulence factors. Inoculation of the different isolates into the fall armyworm body cavity indicated differing levels of pathogenicity, with some strains exhibiting no effects while others causing mortality 24 h after injection. Oral inoculations of pathogens on larvae provided artificial diets caused marginal (< 7%) mortality. However, when insects were provided different maize genotypes, mortality from Serratia increased and was higher on plants exhibiting elevated levels of herbivore resistance (< 50% mortality). Maize defenses facilitated an initial invasion of pathogenic Serratia into the larval hemocoel, which was capable of overcoming insect antimicrobial defenses. Tomato and soybean further indicated elevated mortality due to Serratia compared to artificial diets and differences between plant genotypes. Our results indicate plants can facilitate the incipient emergence of pathobionts within gut of fall armyworm. The ability of resident gut bacteria to switch from a commensal to pathogenic lifestyle has significant ramifications for the host and is likely a broader phenomenon in multitrophic interactions facilitated by plant defenses.

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