Divergence and convergence of gut microbiomes of wild insect pollinators

Author:

Li Jilian1ORCID,Sauers Logan2ORCID,Zhuang Daohua3,Ren Haiqing3,Guo Jun4,Wang Liuhao5,Zhuang Mingsheng16,Guo Yulong1,Zhang Zhengyi1,Wu Jie1,Yao Jun1,Yang Huipeng1,Huang Jiaxing1,Wang Chengrui7,Lin Qinghui7,Zhang Zhigang38ORCID,Sadd Ben M.2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. State Key Laboratory of Resource Insects, Institute of Apicultural Research, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Science, Beijing, China. , Beijing, China

2. School of Biological Sciences, Illinois State University , Normal, Illinois, USA

3. State Key Laboratory for Conservation and Utilization of Bio-Resources in Yunnan, School of Life Sciences, Yunnan University , Kunming, Yunnan, China

4. Faculty of Life Science and Technology, Kunming University of Science and Technology , Kunming, Yunnan, China

5. College of Resources and Environmental Sciences, Henan Institute of Science and Technology , Xinxiang, Henan, China

6. Shanghai Suosheng Biotechnology Co., Ltd. , Shanghai, China

7. Computer Network Information Center, Chinese Academy of Sciences , Beijing, China

8. State Key Laboratory of Genetic Resources and Evolution, Laboratory of Evolutionary & Functional Genomics, Kunming Institute of Zoology, Chinese Academy of Sciences , Kunming, Yunnan, China

Abstract

ABSTRACT Pollination services provided by wild insect pollinators are critical to natural ecosystems and crops around the world. There is an increasing appreciation that the gut microbiota of these insects influences their health and consequently their services. However, pollinator gut microbiota studies have focused on well-described social bees, but rarely include other, more phylogenetically divergent insect pollinators. To expand our understanding, we explored the insect pollinator microbiomes across three insect orders through two DNA sequencing approaches. First, in an exploratory 16S amplicon sequencing analysis of taxonomic community assemblages, we found lineage-specific divergences of dominant microbial genera and microbiota community composition across divergent insect pollinator genera. However, we found no evidence for a strong broad-scale phylogenetic signal, which we see for community relatedness at finer scales. Subsequently, we utilized metagenomic shotgun sequencing to obtain metagenome-assembled genomes and assess the functionality of the microbiota from pollinating flies and social wasps. We uncover a novel gut microbe from pollinating flies in the family Orbaceae that is closely related to Gilliamella spp. from social bees but with divergent functions. We propose this novel species be named Candidatus Gilliamella eristali . Further metagenomes of dominant fly and wasp microbiome members suggest that they are largely not host-insect adapted and instead may be environmentally derived. Overall, this study suggests selective processes involving ecology or physiology, or neutral processes determining microbe colonization may predominate in the turnover of lineages in insect pollinators broadly, while evolution with hosts may occur only under certain circumstances and on smaller phylogenetic scales. IMPORTANCE Wild insect pollinators provide many key ecosystem services, and the microbes associated with these insect pollinators may influence their health. Therefore, understanding the diversity in microbiota structure and function, along with the potential mechanisms shaping the microbiota across diverse insect pollinators, is critical. Our study expands beyond existing knowledge of well-studied social bees, like honey bees, including members from other bee, wasp, butterfly, and fly pollinators. We infer ecological and evolutionary factors that may influence microbiome structure across diverse insect pollinator hosts and the functions that microbiota members may play. We highlight significant differentiation of microbiomes among diverse pollinators. Closer analysis suggests that dominant members may show varying levels of host association and functions, even in a comparison of closely related microbes found in bees and flies. This work suggests varied importance of ecological, physiological, and non-evolutionary filters in determining structure and function across largely divergent wild insect pollinator microbiomes.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Virology,Microbiology

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