Specificity in the symbiotic association between fungus-growing ants and protective Pseudonocardia bacteria

Author:

Cafaro Matías J.12,Poulsen Michael1,Little Ainslie E. F.13,Price Shauna L.4,Gerardo Nicole M.5,Wong Bess67,Stuart Alison E.8,Larget Bret910,Abbot Patrick11,Currie Cameron R.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Bacteriology, University of Wisconsin, Madison, 4325 Microbial Sciences Building, 1550 Linden Drive, Madison, WI 53706, USA

2. Department of Biology, University of Puerto Rico—Mayagüez, Call Box 9000, Mayagüez, PR 00681, USA

3. Quarles and Brady LLP, 33 East Main Street, Suite 900, Madison, WI 53703, USA

4. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of California, Los Angeles, 621 Charles E. Young Drive South, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1606, USA

5. Department of Biology, Emory University, 1510 Clifton Road NE, Atlanta, GA 30322, USA

6. Department of Public Health Sciences, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5T 1R4

7. Sporometrics Inc., 219 Dufferin Street, Suite 20C, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M6K 1Y9

8. Calgary Board of Education, 939-45th Strasse, Calgary, AB, Canada T3C 2B9

9. Department of Statistics, University of Wisconsin, Medical Sciences Center, 1300 University Avenue, Madison, WI 53706, USA

10. Department of Botany, University of Wisconsin, 430 Lincoln Drive, Madison, WI 53706, USA

11. Department of Biological Sciences, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN 37235, USA

Abstract

Fungus-growing ants (tribe Attini) engage in a mutualism with a fungus that serves as the ants' primary food source, but successful fungus cultivation is threatened by microfungal parasites (genus Escovopsis ). Actinobacteria (genus Pseudonocardia ) associate with most of the phylogenetic diversity of fungus-growing ants; are typically maintained on the cuticle of workers; and infection experiments, bioassay challenges and chemical analyses support a role of Pseudonocardia in defence against Escovopsis through antibiotic production. Here we generate a two-gene phylogeny for Pseudonocardia associated with 124 fungus-growing ant colonies, evaluate patterns of ant– Pseudonocardia specificity and test Pseudonocardia antibiotic activity towards Escovopsis . We show that Pseudonocardia associated with fungus-growing ants are not monophyletic: the ants have acquired free-living strains over the evolutionary history of the association. Nevertheless, our analysis reveals a significant pattern of specificity between clades of Pseudonocardia and groups of related fungus-growing ants. Furthermore, antibiotic assays suggest that despite Escovopsis being generally susceptible to inhibition by diverse Actinobacteria, the ant-derived Pseudonocardia inhibit Escovopsis more strongly than they inhibit other fungi, and are better at inhibiting this pathogen than most environmental Pseudonocardia strains tested. Our findings support a model that many fungus-growing ants maintain specialized Pseudonocardia symbionts that help with garden defence.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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