生物
真菌
放线菌门
阿塔
共生
化学防御
细菌
微生物学
植物
膜翅目
16S核糖体RNA
食草动物
遗传学
作者
Sibyl F. D. Batey,Claudio Greco,Matthew I. Hutchings,Barrie Wilkinson
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.cbpa.2020.08.001
摘要
Fungus-growing attine ants are under constant threat from fungal pathogens such as the specialized mycoparasite Escovopsis, which uses combined physical and chemical attack strategies to prey on the fungal gardens of the ants. In defence, some species assemble protective microbiomes on their exoskeletons that contain antimicrobial-producing Actinobacteria. Underlying this network of mutualistic and antagonistic interactions are an array of chemical signals. Escovopsis weberi produces the shearinine terpene-indole alkaloids, which affect ant behaviour, diketopiperazines to combat defensive bacteria, and other small molecules that inhibit the fungal cultivar. Pseudonocardia and Streptomyces mutualist bacteria produce depsipeptide and polyene macrolide antifungals active against Escovopsis spp. The ant nest metabolome is further complicated by competition between defensive bacteria, which produce antibacterials active against even closely related species.
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