4.7 Article

Symbiont-Mediated Protection of Acromyrmex Leaf-Cutter Ants from the Entomopathogenic Fungus Metarhizium anisopliae

期刊

MBIO
卷 12, 期 6, 页码 -

出版社

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/mBio.01885-21

关键词

defensive symbiosis; symbiont acquisition; fungus-growing ants; host-parasite interactions; antifungal

资金

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [U19 Al109673]
  2. National Science Foundation (NSF) [MCB-0702025, DEB-1927155]
  3. SENACYT-IFARHU
  4. H. I. Romnes Faculty Research Fellowship
  5. WARF
  6. UW-Madison School of Pharmacy
  7. NSF [DGE-1256259]
  8. NIH [NCRR S10RR029531]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The study demonstrates that fungus-growing ants engage in a defensive symbiosis with antibiotic-producing ectosymbiotic bacteria to protect their fungal mutualist from pathogens. Different Acromyrmex ant species derive varying degrees of immunity to fungal pathogens from their defensive symbionts, with some species more reliant on these symbionts for protection. The defensive symbiotic bacterium Pseudonocardia not only protects the ants' fungal crop but also provides increased immunity to fungal pathogens that infect the ant workers themselves.
Many fungus-growing ants engage in a defensive symbiosis with antibiotic-producing ectosymbiotic bacteria in the genus Pseudonocardia, which help protect the ants' fungal mutualist from a specialized mycoparasite, Escovopsis. Here, using germfree ant rearing and experimental pathogen infection treatments, we evaluate if Acromyrmex ants derive higher immunity to the entomopathogenic fungus Metarhizium anisopliae from their Pseudonocardia symbionts. We further examine the ecological dynamics and defensive capacities of Pseudonocardia against M. anisopliae across seven different Acromyrmex species by controlling Pseudonocardia acquisition using ant-nonnative Pseudonocardia switches, in vitro challenges, and in situ mass spectrometry imaging (MSI). We show that Pseudonocardia protects the ants against M. anisopliae across different Acromyrmex species and appears to afford higher protection than metapleural gland (MG) secretions. Although Acromyrmex echinatior ants with nonnative Pseudonocardia symbionts receive protection from M. anisopliae regardless of the strain acquired compared with Pseudonocardia-free conditions, we find significant variation in the degree of protection conferred by different Pseudonocardia strains. Additionally, when ants were reared in Pseudonocardia-free conditions, some species exhibit more susceptibility to M. anisopliae than others, indicating that some ant species depend more on defensive symbionts than others. In vitro challenge experiments indicate that Pseudonocardia reduces Metarhizium conidiospore germination area. Our chemometric analysis using matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization mass spectrometry imaging (MALDI-MSI) reveals that Pseudonocardia- carrying ants produce more chemical signals than Pseudonocardia-free treatments, indicating that Pseudonocardia produces bioactive metabolites on the Acromyrmex cuti-cle. Our results indicate that Pseudonocardia can serve as a dual-purpose defensive sym-biont, conferring increased immunity for both the obligate fungal mutualist and the ants themselves. IMPORTANCE In some plants and animals, beneficial microbes mediate host immune response against pathogens, including by serving as defensive symbionts that produce anti-microbial compounds. Defensive symbionts are known in several insects, including some leaf-cutter ants where antifungal-producing Actinobacteria help protect the fungal mutualist of the ants from specialized mycoparasites. In many defensive symbioses, the extent and specificity of defensive benefits received by the host are poorly understood. Here, using aposymbiotic rearing, symbiont switching experiments, and imaging mass spectrometry, we explore the ecological and chemical dynamics of the model defensive symbiosis between Acromyrmex ants and their defensive symbiotic bacterium Pseudonocardia. We show that the defensive symbiont not only protects the fungal crop of Acromyrmex but also provides protection from fungal pathogens that infect the ant workers themselves. Furthermore, we reveal that the increased immunity to pathogen infection differs among strains of defensive symbionts and that the degree of reliance on a defensive symbiont for protection varies across congeneric ant species. Taken together, our results suggest that Acromyrmex-associated Pseudonocardia have evolved broad antimicrobial defenses that promote strong immunity to diverse fungal pathogens within the ancient fungus-growing ant-microbe symbiosis.

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