| Literature DB >> 21475686 |
P W Kooij, M Schiøtt, J J Boomsma, H H De Fine Licht.
Abstract
Fungus gardens of the basidiomycete Leucocoprinus gongylophorus sustain large colonies of leaf-cutting ants by degrading the plant material collected by the ants. Recent studies have shown that enzyme activity in these gardens is primarily targeted toward starch, proteins and the pectin matrix associated with cell walls, rather than toward structural cell wall components such as cellulose and hemicelluloses. Substrate constituents are also known to be sequentially degraded in different sections of the fungus garden. To test the plasticity in the extracellular expression of fungus-garden enzymes, we measured the changes in enzyme activity after a controlled shift in fungal substrate offered to six laboratory colonies of Atta cephalotes. An ant diet consisting exclusively of grains of parboiled rice rapidly increased the activity of endo-proteinases and some of the pectinases attacking the backbone structure of pectin molecules, relative to a pure diet of bramble leaves, and this happened predominantly in the most recently established top sections of fungus gardens. However, fungus-garden amylase activity did not significantly increase despite the substantial increase in starch availability from the rice diet, relative to the leaf diet controls. Enzyme activity in the older, bottom sections of fungus gardens decreased, indicating a faster processing of the rice substrate compared to the leaf diet. These results suggest that leaf-cutting ant fungus gardens can rapidly adjust enzyme activity to provide a better match with substrate availability and that excess starch that is not protected by cell walls may be digested by the ants rather than by the fungus-garden symbiont. ELECTRONIC SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIAL: The online version of this article (doi:10.1007/s00040-010-0127-9) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 21475686 PMCID: PMC3059815 DOI: 10.1007/s00040-010-0127-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Insectes Soc ISSN: 0020-1812 Impact factor: 1.643
Fig. 1The experimental setup used in this study. Fungus-garden samples were taken at t 0 prior to the experimental treatment, after colonies had been fed with a mixed laboratory diet of bramble leaves, rice grains and pieces of apple (a). At t 0 three colonies were randomly assigned to a diet of only bramble leaves and three other colonies to a diet of only parboiled rice (a, b). Every third day until day 30, fungal samples were collected from each colony with two samples collected from the top-, middle- and bottom sections of gardens and from the debris pile, respectively, and immediately measured for enzyme activity on AZCL assay plates (c) following standard methods (see text for details) (Photo: Pepijn Kooij)
Main carbon sources in the experimental diets and their expected degradation enzymes
| Diet | Main constituents | Assumed degrading enzymes measured in this study |
|---|---|---|
| Rice grainsa, b | Starch, hemicelluloses, proteins; no distinct cell walls | α-Amylase, endo-proteinases, endo-xylanases, β-glucanase |
| Bramble leavesb, c | Cellulose and hemicelluloses associated with cell walls; starch and proteins inside the cells | Cellulases, xyloglucanase, α-amylase, endo-proteinases, endo-xylanases, β-glucanase |
The lack of distinct cell walls and the relative higher amounts of starch and proteins in rice were expected to induce a higher enzyme activity of fungal amylases and proteinases in the fungus garden
aChampagne et al. (2004), bSelvendran (1984), cChapin III and Shaver (1988)
Fig. 2Mean enzyme activities (±SE) at day 30 (t 30) relative to the onset of the experiment (t 0) per functional enzyme group and fungus-garden section, based on 1–4 AZCL substrates per group of enzymes (see Supplementary Online Material). In all five enzyme groups the rice-induced activity increased in the top sections and decreased in the bottom section and debris pile, relative to the bramble leaf diet. The pictures toward the bottom right are representative examples of the macroscopically visible differences in color and texture between fungus gardens provided with only bramble leaves (left) and only rice diet (right) after 15 days, i.e., halfway through the experiment (photos: Pepijn Kooij)