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« Previous Abstract"Genomes of the willow-galling sawflies Euura lappo and Eupontania aestiva (Hymenoptera: Tenthredinidae): a resource for research on ecological speciation, adaptation, and gall induction"    Next AbstractDetection of volatile metabolites of moulds isolated from a contaminated library »

Genome


Title:"Microbiomes of willow-galling sawflies: effects of host plant, gall type, and phylogeny on community structure and function"
Author(s):Michell CT; Nyman T;
Address:"Department of Environmental and Biological Sciences, University of Eastern Finland, Joensuu, Finland. Department of Ecosystems in the Barents Region, Norwegian Institute of Bioeconomy Research, Svanvik, Norway"
Journal Title:Genome
Year:2021
Volume:20210407
Issue:6
Page Number:615 - 626
DOI: 10.1139/gen-2020-0018
ISSN/ISBN:1480-3321 (Electronic) 0831-2796 (Linking)
Abstract:"While free-living herbivorous insects are thought to harbor microbial communities composed of transient bacteria derived from their diet, recent studies indicate that insects that induce galls on plants may be involved in more intimate host-microbe relationships. We used 16S rDNA metabarcoding to survey larval microbiomes of 20 nematine sawfly species that induce bud or leaf galls on 13 Salix species. The 391 amplicon sequence variants (ASVs) detected represented 69 bacterial genera in six phyla. Multi-variate statistical analyses showed that the structure of larval microbiomes is influenced by willow host species as well as by gall type. Nevertheless, a 'core' microbiome composed of 58 ASVs is shared widely across the focal galler species. Within the core community, the presence of many abundant, related ASVs representing multiple distantly related bacterial taxa is reflected as a statistically significant effect of bacterial phylogeny on galler-microbe associations. Members of the core community have a variety of inferred functions, including degradation of phenolic compounds, nutrient supplementation, and production of plant hormones. Hence, our results support suggestions of intimate and diverse interactions between galling insects and microbes and add to a growing body of evidence that microbes may play a role in the induction of insect galls on plants"
Keywords:"Animals Bacteria/*classification/*genetics Biodiversity Host Microbial Interactions Host Specificity Insecta Larva Microbiota/*genetics/*physiology *Phylogeny Plant Growth Regulators Plant Leaves RNA, Ribosomal, 16S/genetics Salix/*microbiology Salix gall;"
Notes:"MedlineMichell, Craig T Nyman, Tommi eng Canada 2021/04/08 Genome. 2021 Jun; 64(6):615-626. doi: 10.1139/gen-2020-0018. Epub 2021 Apr 7"

 
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