4.4 Article

The gut microbiome analysis of Anastrepha obliqua reveals inter-kingdom diversity: bacteria, fungi, and archaea

Journal

ARCHIVES OF MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 204, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00203-022-03207-y

Keywords

Anastrepha obliqua; Mass rearing; Metabolism; Microbiome; Sterile insect technique

Categories

Funding

  1. National Council of Science and Technology project [CB-2008-01-101389, 17171]

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This study analyzed the composition of intestinal microorganisms in the fruit fly Anastrepha obliqua and found a higher microbial diversity in wild flies compared to laboratory species, suggesting a specialized metabolism for processing nutrients associated with an artificial diet. The study also identified previously undescribed bacterial species in the fruit fly.
The fruit fly Anastrepha obliqua is an economically important pest. The sterile insect technique to control it involves mass production and release of sterile flies to reduce the reproduction of the wild population. As noted in different Tephritidae, the performance of sterile males may be affected by the assimilation of nutrients under mass-rearing conditions. In the wild, the fly's life cycle suggests the acquisition of different organisms that could modulate its fitness and physiology. For A. obliqua, there is no information regarding microorganisms other than bacteria. This study analyzed bacteria, fungal, and archaea communities in the A. obliqua gut through denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) profiles of 16S (using a different set of primers for bacteria and archaea) and 18S ribosomal DNA markers. We found that wild flies presented higher microbial diversity related to fructose assimilation than laboratory species, suggesting that microorganisms have led to a specialized metabolism to process nutrients associated with an artificial diet. We identified species that have not been previously described in this fruit fly, especially actinobacteria and archaea, by employing different primer sets aimed at the same molecular marker but targeting diverse hypervariable regions of 16S rDNA. The possibility that Archaea affect fly fitness should not be ignored. This report on the intestinal microbial (bacteria, archaea, and fungi) composition of A. obliqua contributes to our understanding of the role of microorganisms in the development and physiology of the flies.

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