Abstract

A comparison of the diversity of bacterial communities in the larval midgut and adult gut of the European forest cockchafer (Melolontha hippocastani) was carried out using approaches that were both dependent on and independent of cultivation. Clone libraries of the 16S rRNA gene revealed 150 operational taxonomic units (OTUs) that belong to 11 taxonomical classes and two other groups that could be classified only to the phylum level. The most abundant classes were β, δ and γ-proteobacteria, Clostridia, Bacilli, Erysipelotrichi and Sphingobacteria. Although the insect’s gut is emptied in the prepupal stage and the beetle undergoes a long diapause period, a subset of eight taxonomic classes from the aforementioned eleven were found to be common in the guts of diapausing adults and the larval midguts (L2, L3). Moreover, several bacterial phylotypes belonging to these common bacterial classes were found to be shared by the larval midgut and the adult gut. Despite this, the adult gut bacterial community represented a subset of that found in the larvae midgut. Consequently, the midgut of the larval instars contains a more diverse bacterial community compared to the adult gut. On the other hand, after the bacteria present in the larvae were cultivated, eight bacterial species were isolated. Moreover, we found evidence of the active role of some of the bacterial species isolated in food digestion, namely, the presence of amylase and xylanolytic properties. Finally, fluorescence in situ hybridization allowed us to confirm the presence of selected species in the insect gut and through this, their ecological niche as well as the metagenomic results. The results presented here elucidated the heterogeneity of aerobic and facultative bacteria in the gut of a holometabolous insect species having two different feeding habits.

Highlights

  • In nature one of the largest classes of living organisms is Insecta

  • The midguts of L3 larvae carry the highest amount of operational taxonomic units (OTUs; Table 1), many of which were found in the midguts of the L2 larvae

  • Our data revealed the presence of a complex bacterial community in the cockchafer larval midgut and the adult gut

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Summary

Introduction

In nature one of the largest classes of living organisms is Insecta. Its diversity is made obvious by the enormous and various microbial communities found in the guts of insects [1]. The bacteria-insect interaction encompasses nutrition and behavior. One of the widely studied cases involves termites: the bacteria and protozoa present in termites’ hindgut paunches allows them to degrade recalcitrant polymers, such as cellulose and hemicellulose, into soluble compounds absorbed by their intestinal epithelia [3,4]. These studies have demonstrated the existence of microbial lineages that apparently showed co-evolution with their termite hosts [5]

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