Author:
Salgueiro Julieta,Nussenbaum A. Laura,Milla Fabián H.,Asimakis Elias,Goane Lucía,Ruiz M. Josefina,Bachmann Guillermo E.,Vera María T.,Stathopoulou Panagiota,Bourtzis Kostas,Deutscher Ania T.,Lanzavecchia Silvia B.,Tsiamis George,Segura Diego F.
Abstract
The genusAnastrepha(Diptera Tephritidae) includes some of the most important fruit fly pests in the Americas. Here, we studied the gut bacterial community of 3rd instar larvae ofAnastrepha fraterculussp. 1 through Next Generation Sequencing (lllumina) of the V3-V4 hypervariable region within the 16S rRNA gene. Gut bacterial communities were compared between host species (guava and peach), and geographical origins (Concordia and Horco Molle in Argentina) representing distinct ecological scenarios. In addition, we explored the effect of spatial scale by comparing the samples collected from different trees within each geographic origin and host species. We also addressed the effect of fruit size on bacterial diversity. The gut bacterial community was affected both by host species and geographic origin. At smaller spatial scales, the gut bacterial profile differed among trees of the same species and location at least in one host-location combination. There was no effect of fruit size on the larval gut bacteriome. Operational Taxonomic Units (OTUs) assigned toWolbachia,TatumellaandEnterobacterwere identified in all samples examined, which suggest potential, non-transient symbioses. Better knowledge on the larval gut bacteriome contributes valuable information to develop sustainable control strategies againstA. fraterculustargeting key symbionts as the Achilles’ heel to control this important fruit fly pest.
Funder
International Atomic Energy Agency
Subject
Microbiology (medical),Microbiology
Cited by
3 articles.
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