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Chemical ecology of an apex predator life cycle

Authors :
Heidi Goodrich-Blair
Nicholas C. Mucci
Shane Foye
Sarah Kauffman
Yoshito Chikaraishi
Shawn A. Steffan
Mengyi Cao
Katarina A. Jones
Shawn R. Campagna
Michela Taufer
Michael R. Wyatt
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2021.

Abstract

Microbial symbiotic interactions, mediated by small molecule signaling, drive physiological processes of higher order systems. Metabolic analytic technologies advancements provide new avenues to examine how chemical ecology, or conversion of existing biomass to new forms, changes over a symbiotic lifecycle. We examine such processes using the tripartite relationship between nematode host Steinernema carpocapsae, its obligate mutualist bacterium, Xenorhabdus nematophila, and the insects they infect together. We integrate trophic, metabolomics, and gene regulation analyses to understand insect biomass conversion to nematode or bacterium biomass. Trophic analysis established bacteria as the primary insect consumers, with nematodes at trophic position 4.37, indicating consumption of bacteria and likely other nematodes. Significant, discrete metabolic phases were distinguishable from each other, indicating the insect chemical environment changes reproducibly during bioconversion. Tricarboxylic acid cycle components and amino acids were significantly affected throughout infection. These findings contribute to an ongoing understanding of how symbiont associations shape chemical environments.TeaserEntomopathogenic nematodes act as an apex predator in some ecosystems through altering chemical environments of their prey.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........94eafc2458d9f45659a7cf2da8e53542