论文标题
涉及碳利用昆虫幼虫的碳和氮代谢的共生细菌网络结构
Symbiotic bacterial network structure involved in carbon and nitrogen metabolism of wood-utilizing insect larvae
论文作者
论文摘要
在全球范围内,有效的木材生物量生物利用是必要的。由于几个昆虫幼虫可以将木材生物质用作营养来源,因此预计其消化机制的研究将推测木材生物量加工中的新规则。在这里,研究了昆虫模型甲虫幼虫的肠道中涉及碳和氮代谢的居民细菌的关系。幼体粪便的细菌分析表明,其成员的富集可能包括植物生长促进,氮循环调节和/或环境保护的候选者。这些细菌的丰度不一定与栖息地的丰度正相关,这表明它们可能被选择地富集在幼虫的肠道中。进一步的关联分析预测,肠道中的碳和氮代谢受到其他常见细菌的存在的影响,栖息地和粪便中的种群并未发生明显改变。基于针对这些选定细菌基团的假设,结构估计模型分析统计表明,它们的碳和氮代谢及其稳定的同位素Δ13C和δ15N可能与粪便富集细菌和其他常见细菌有关。此外,其他因果推理分析,例如因果介导分析,线性非高斯无循环模型(lingam)和贝叶甘甘并不一定肯定存在代谢涉及的突出细菌的存在,这意味着其重要性是对新陈代谢的细菌群体而不是一种非凡的细菌。因此,这些观察结果突出了共生细菌群的多方面视图,利用昆虫幼虫中木材生物量的碳和氮是潜在环境有益细菌的耕种。
Effective biological utilization of wood biomass is necessary worldwide. Since several insect larvae can use wood biomass as a nutrient source, studies on their digestive mechanism are expected to speculate a novel rule in wood biomass processing. Here, the relationships of inhabitant bacteria involved in carbon and nitrogen metabolism in the intestine of beetle larvae, an insect model, are investigated. Bacterial analysis of larval feces showed enrichment of members of which could include candidates for plant growth promotion, nitrogen cycle modulation, and/or environmental protection. The abundances of these bacteria were not necessarily positively correlated with the abundance in the habitat, suggesting that they might be selectively enriched in the intestines of larvae. Further association analysis predicted that carbon and nitrogen metabolism in the intestine was affected by the presence of the other common bacteria, the populations of which were not remarkably altered in the habitat and feces. Based on hypotheses targeting these selected bacterial groups, structural estimation modeling analyses statistically suggested that their metabolism of carbon and nitrogen and their stable isotopes, δ13C and δ15N, may be associated with fecal enriched bacteria and other common bacteria. In addition, other causal inference analyses, such as causal mediation analysis, linear non-Gaussian acyclic model (LiNGAM), and BayesLiNGAM, did not necessarily affirm the existence of prominent bacteria involved in metabolism, implying its importance as the bacterial groups for metabolism rather than a remarkable bacterium. Thus, these observations highlight a multifaceted view of symbiotic bacterial groups utilizing carbon and nitrogen from wood biomass in insect larvae as a cultivator of potentially environmentally beneficial bacteria.