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Temperature influences the outcomes of an environmentally-acquired symbiosis

dataset
posted on 2025-08-19, 02:43 authored by Patrick Stillson, Kaisy Martinez, Johnathan Adamson, Arshya Tehrani, Alison Ravenscraft
<p>Pentatomomorphan bugs can form symbiotic associations with bacteria belonging to the supergenus <em>Burkholderia sensu lato.</em> This relationship has become a model for understanding environmental symbiont acquisition. Host insects can utilize various symbiont strains from across <em>Burkholderia sensu lato</em>, however, host colonization success and benefits conferred vary by bacterial clade. Therefore, we conducted a meta-analysis aimed at identifying candidate genes that underpin beneficial symbioses within this system. We scanned the entire Burkholderiaceae family for the presence of 17 colonization-associated genes, as well as 88 candidate genes that are differentially expressed during symbiosis. There was no difference in the distribution of the 17 colonization-associated genes between symbiotic (<em>Caballeronia</em> and iPBE) and non-symbiotic lineages; however, there was a higher prevalence of the 88 candidate genes in the insect symbiont lineages. We subsequently analyzed the genomes of nine symbiotic <em>Caballeronia</em> strains that confer varying fitness benefits to their insect hosts. One symbiont strain was significantly worse, one was significantly better, and the remaining seven were intermediate in terms of conferred host fitness benefits. We found that strains possessing a higher number of the candidate genes conferred faster host development time. Furthermore, we identified two candidate genes that were missing in the least beneficial strain but present in the other eight, suggesting that these genes may be important in modulating symbiont quality. Our study suggests that the mechanisms required for host colonization are broadly distributed across Burkholderiaceae, but the genes that determine symbiont quality are more prevalent in insect-associated species. This work helps to identify genes that influence this highly specialized yet diverse symbiosis between Pentatomomorphan insects and Burkholderiaceae bacteria.</p>

Funding

USDA: 2019-67013-29407

National Institutes of Health: K12GM000708

History

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Data contact name

Stillson, Patrick

Data contact email

patrick.stillson@gmail.com

Publisher

Dryad

Theme

  • Not specified

ISO Topic Category

  • biota

National Agricultural Library Thesaurus terms

insects; genome; models; symbiosis; meta-analysis; Burkholderiaceae; temperature; family; species; symbionts

Pending citation

  • No

Public Access Level

  • Public

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