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  6. A unique midgut-associated bacterial community hosted by the cave beetle Cansiliella servadeii (Coleoptera: Leptodirini) reveals parallel phylogenetic divergences from universal gut-specific ancestors
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A unique midgut-associated bacterial community hosted by the cave beetle Cansiliella servadeii (Coleoptera: Leptodirini) reveals parallel phylogenetic divergences from universal gut-specific ancestors

Date Issued
June 10, 2013
Author(s)
Paoletti, Maurizio G
Mazzon, Luca
Martinez-Sañudo, Isabel
Simonato, Mauro
Beggio, Mattia
Dreon, Angelo Leandro
Pamio, Alberto
Brilli, Mauro
Dorigo, Luca
Engel, Annette Summers
Tondello, Alessandra
Baldan, Barbara
Concheri, Giuseppe
Squartini, Andrea
Permanent URI
https://trace.tennessee.edu/handle/20.500.14382/16976
Abstract

Background


Cansiliella servadeii (Coleoptera) is an endemic troglobite living in deep carbonate caves in North-Eastern Italy. The beetle constantly moves and browses in its preferred habitat (consisting in flowing water and moonmilk, a soft speleothem colonized by microorganisms) self-preens to convey material from elytra, legs, and antennae towards the mouth. We investigated its inner and outer microbiota using microscopy and DNA-based approaches.

Results

Abundant microbial cell masses were observed on the external appendages. Cansiliella’s midgut is fully colonized by live microbes and culture-independent analyses yielded nearly 30 different 16S phylotypes that have no overlap with the community composition of the moonmilk. Many of the lineages, dominated by Gram positive groups, share very low similarity to database sequences. However for most cases, notwithstanding their very limited relatedness with existing records, phylotypes could be assigned to bacterial clades that had been retrieved from insect or other animals’ digestive traits.

Conclusions

Results suggest a history of remote separation from a common ancestor that harboured a set of gut-specific bacteria whose functions are supposedly critical for host physiology. The phylogenetic and coevolutionary implications of the parallel occurrences of these prokaryotic guilds appear to apply throughout a broad spectrum of animal diversity. Their persistence and conservation underlies a possibly critical role of precise bacterial assemblages in animal-bacteria interactions.

Subjects

Cansiliella servadeii...

Gut bacteria

Animal-bacteria coevo...

Cave; Moonmilk

Food web

Disciplines
Environmental Microbiology and Microbial Ecology
Recommended Citation
BMC Microbiology 2013, 13:129 doi:10.1186/1471-2180-13-129
Embargo Date
August 7, 2013
File(s)
Thumbnail Image
Name

1471_2180_13_129.pdf

Size

1.72 MB

Format

Adobe PDF

Checksum (MD5)

4245d388652c8ebfc2ab608e0efbb735

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