4.7 Review

Reciprocal interactions between anthropogenic stressors and insect microbiota

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND POLLUTION RESEARCH
Volume 29, Issue 43, Pages 64469-64488

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s11356-022-21857-9

Keywords

Xenobiotics; Insects; Bacteria; Detoxification; Insect-microbiota interactions

Funding

  1. Ecole Urbaine de Lyon
  2. CNRS MITI program
  3. CNRSEC2CO program
  4. Agence Nationale de la Recherche

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Insects play important roles in nature and are influenced by environmental changes and anthropic activities. Recent studies have highlighted the role of insect-associated bacterial microbiota in insect responses to xenobiotics. Stressor exposure can affect the composition and structure of insect microbiota, which in turn may influence insect biology.
Insects play many important roles in nature due to their diversity, ecological role, and impact on agriculture or human health. They are directly influenced by environmental changes and in particular anthropic activities that constitute an important driver of change in the environmental characteristics. Insects face numerous anthropogenic stressors and have evolved various detoxication mechanisms to survive and/or resist to these compounds. Recent studies highligted the pressure exerted by xenobiotics on insect life-cycle and the important role of insect-associated bacterial microbiota in the insect responses to environmental changes. Stressor exposure can have various impacts on the composition and structure of insect microbiota that in turn may influence insect biology. Moreover, bacterial communities associated with insects can be directly or indirectly involved in detoxification processes with the selection of certain microorganisms capable of degrading xenobiotics. Further studies are needed to assess the role of insect-associated microbiota as key contributor to the xenobiotic metabolism and thus as a driver for insect adaptation to polluted habitats.

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