生物
叶圈
寄生虫寄主
绿僵菌
昆虫
医学微生物学
微生物生态学
真菌学
微生物学
植物
抗真菌
细菌
生物病虫害防治
昆虫病原真菌
遗传学
万维网
计算机科学
作者
Peng Zhao,Hong Sui,Yuekun Li,Haimin Chen,Han‐chun Gao,Chengshu Wang
出处
期刊:Microbiome
[Springer Nature]
日期:2024-02-26
卷期号:12 (1)
标识
DOI:10.1186/s40168-024-01764-6
摘要
Abstract Background Bacterial transfers from plants to insect herbivore guts have been well investigated. However, bacterial exchanges between plant phyllospheres and insect cuticles remain unclear, as does their related biological function. Results Here, we report that the cuticular bacterial loads of silkworm larvae quickly increased after molting and feeding on the white mulberry ( Morus alba ) leaves. The isolation and examination of silkworm cuticular bacteria identified one bacterium Mammaliicoccus sciuri that could completely inhibit the spore germination of fungal entomopathogens Metarhizium robertsii and Beauveria bassiana . Interestingly, Ma. sciuri was evident originally from mulberry leaves, which could produce a secreted chitinolytic lysozyme (termed Msp1) to damage fungal cell walls. In consistency, the deletion of Msp1 substantially impaired bacterial antifungal activity. Pretreating silkworm larvae with Ma. sciuri cells followed by fungal topical infections revealed that this bacterium could help defend silkworms against fungal infections. Unsurprisingly, the protective efficacy of Δ Msp1 was considerably reduced when compared with that of wild-type bacterium. Administration of bacterium-treated diets had no negative effect on silkworm development; instead, bacterial supplementation could protect the artificial diet from Aspergillus contamination. Conclusions The results of this study evidence that the cross-kingdom transfer of bacteria from plant phyllospheres to insect herbivore cuticles can help protect insects against fungal parasite attacks.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI