4.7 Article

Microbial Communities of Stored Product Mites: Variation by Species and Population

期刊

MICROBIAL ECOLOGY
卷 81, 期 2, 页码 506-522

出版社

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00248-020-01581-y

关键词

Mite; Feeding; Feces; Eggs; Allergen; Symbionts; Cardinium; Wolbachia; Bartonella

资金

  1. Czech Science Foundation (GACR) [GA19-09998S]
  2. Russian Science Foundation [19-14-00004]

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The study reveals that mite-associated microbiomes have a complex structure in mite bodies and eggs, impacting mite fitness and population growth. Intracellular bacterial symbionts may influence the composition of the mite microbiome, causing significant differences between microbial profiles in different conspecific mite populations.
Arthropod-associated microorganisms are important because they affect host fitness, protect hosts from pathogens, and influence the host's ability to vector pathogens. Stored product mites (Astigmata) often establish large populations in various types of food items, damaging the food by direct feeding and introducing contaminants, including their own bodies, allergen-containing feces, and associated microorganisms. Here we access the microbial structure and abundance in rearing diets, eggs, feces fraction, and mite bodies of 16 mite populations belonging to three species (Carpoglyphus lactis,Acarus siro, andTyrophagus putrescentiae) using quantitative PCR and 16S ribosomal RNA (rRNA) gene amplicon sequencing. The mite microbiomes had a complex structure dominated by the following bacterial taxa (OTUs): (a) intracellular symbionts of the generaCardiniumandWolbachiain the mite bodies and eggs; (b) putative gut symbionts of the generaSolitalea,Bartonella, andSodalisabundant in mite bodies and also present in mite feces; (c) feces-associated or environmental bacteria of the generaBacillus,Staphylococcus, andKocuriain the diet, mite bodies, and feces. Interestingly and counterintuitively, the differences between microbial communities in various conspecific mite populations were higher than those between different mite species. To explain some of these differences, we hypothesize that the intracellular bacterial symbionts can affect microbiome composition in mite bodies, causing differences between microbial profiles. Microbial profiles differed between various sample types, such as mite eggs, bodies, and the environment (spent growth medium-SPGM). Low bacterial abundances in eggs may result in stochastic effects in parent-offspring microbial transmission, except for the intracellular symbionts. Bacteria in the rearing diet had little effect on the microbial community structure in SPGM and mite bodies. Mite fitness was positively correlated with bacterial abundance in SPGM and negatively correlated with bacterial abundances in mite bodies. Our study demonstrates critical host-microbe interactions, affecting all stages of mite growth and leading to alteration of the environmental microbiome. Correlational evidence based on absolute quantitation of bacterial 16S rRNA gene copies suggests that mite-associated microorganisms are critical for modulating important pest properties of mites by altering population growth.

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