Abstract

BackgroundThe small hive beetle (Aethina tumida; ATUMI) is an invasive parasite of bee colonies. ATUMI feeds on both fruits and bee nest products, facilitating its spread and increasing its impact on honey bees and other pollinators. We have sequenced and annotated the ATUMI genome, providing the first genomic resources for this species and for the Nitidulidae, a beetle family that is closely related to the extraordinarily species-rich clade of beetles known as the Phytophaga. ATUMI thus provides a contrasting view as a neighbor for one of the most successful known animal groups.ResultsWe present a robust genome assembly and a gene set possessing 97.5% of the core proteins known from the holometabolous insects. The ATUMI genome encodes fewer enzymes for plant digestion than the genomes of wood-feeding beetles but nonetheless shows signs of broad metabolic plasticity. Gustatory receptors are few in number compared to other beetles, especially receptors with known sensitivity (in other beetles) to bitter substances. In contrast, several gene families implicated in detoxification of insecticides and adaptation to diverse dietary resources show increased copy numbers. The presence and diversity of homologs involved in detoxification differ substantially from the bee hosts of ATUMI.ConclusionsOur results provide new insights into the genomic basis for local adaption and invasiveness in ATUMI and a blueprint for control strategies that target this pest without harming their honey bee hosts. A minimal set of gustatory receptors is consistent with the observation that, once a host colony is invaded, food resources are predictable. Unique detoxification pathways and pathway members can help identify which treatments might control this species even in the presence of honey bees, which are notoriously sensitive to pesticides.

Highlights

  • Comments: I do not see where overall gene compliment completeness is mentioned in the abstract

  • Minor Comments: Abstract - Introduction of abbreviation before Latin name sees odd. We corrected this in the first line of the introduction so that both mentions of ATUMI follow the latin name that generated this acronym

  • Orthologous group numbers need commas to be consistent with rest of paper. fixed

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Summary

Introduction

Reviewer #2: The authors have addressed most comments raised by the reviewers. The manuscript has been significantly improved. Reviewer reports: Reviewer #1: I think they authors did an acceptable job addressing my comments. I only have further minor editorial comments. Comments: I do not see where overall gene compliment completeness is mentioned in the abstract.

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