| Literature DB >> 24324923 |
Danielle Bertino-Grimaldi1, Marcelo N Medeiros, Ricardo P Vieira, Alexander M Cardoso, Aline S Turque, Cynthia B Silveira, Rodolpho M Albano, Suzete Bressan-Nascimento, Elói S Garcia, Wanderley de Souza, Orlando B Martins, Ednildo A Machado.
Abstract
ABSTRACT: Cockroaches are insects that can accommodate diets of different composition, including lignocellulosic materials. Digestion of these compounds is achieved by the insect's own enzymes and also by enzymes produced by gut symbionts. The presence of different and modular bacterial phyla on the cockroach gut tract suggests that this insect could be an interesting model to study the organization of gut bacterial communities associated with the digestion of different lignocellulosic diets. Thus, changes in the diversity of gut associated bacterial communities of insects exposed to such diets could give useful insights on how to improve hemicellulose and cellulose breakdown systems. In this work, through sequence analysis of 16S rRNA clone libraries, we compared the phylogenetic diversity and composition of gut associated bacteria in the cockroach Periplaneta americana collected in the wild-types or kept on two different diets: sugarcane bagasse and crystalline cellulose. These high fiber diets favor the predominance of some bacterial phyla, such as Firmicutes, when compared to wild-types cockroaches. Our data show a high bacterial diversity in P. americana gut, with communities composed mostly by the phyla Bacteroidetes, Firmicutes, Proteobacteria and Synergistetes. Our data show that the composition and diversity of gut bacterial communities could be modulated by diet composition. The increased presence of Firmicutes in sugarcane bagasse and crystalline cellulose-fed animals suggests that these bacteria are strongly involved in lignocellulose digestion in cockroach guts.Entities:
Keywords: 16S; Bagasse; Microbiota; Periplaneta; Sugarcane
Year: 2013 PMID: 24324923 PMCID: PMC3855920 DOI: 10.1186/2193-1801-2-609
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Springerplus ISSN: 2193-1801
Figure 1Digestive system of (A) Adult insect and (B) Whole gut. FG–Foregut; MG–Midgut; HG; Hindgut.
Figure 2Distribution bacterial phyla in 16S rRNA gene sequences from cockroaches submitted to different diets. Gut bacterial DNA was obtained from cockroaches fed on sugarcane bagasse or cellulose (both for at least one week) and from wild-types cockroaches (collected from sewage). Clone libraries from amplified 16S rRNA genes were prepared and sequenced. Nucleotide sequences were submitted to the RDP Classifier tool at 80% bootstrap cutoffs.
Figure 3Rarefaction analysis of 16S rRNA gene sequences from gut contents of wild-types cockroaches and those fed on sugarcane bagasse or cellulose. The total number of sequences was plotted against unique OTUs defined by using a distance level of 97% (A) or 80% (B) using the furthest neighbor assignment algorithm in MOTHUR.
Selected LIBSHUFF comparisons
| Comparison | dCXYScore | Significance |
|---|---|---|
| Wild-types x Bagasse | 0.17079286 | <0.0001 |
| Bagasse x Wild-types | 0.05764750 | <0.0001 |
| Wild-types x Cellulose | 0.01280417 | <0.0001 |
| Cellulose x Wild-types | 0.13229231 | <0.0001 |
| Cellulose x Bagasse | 0.00228431 | 0.0030 |
| Bagasse x Cellulose | 0.00023490 | 0.9355 |
Figure 4Match between bacterial communities in cockroaches fed different diets. (A) Similarity between bacterial communities. Principal coordinates plots (PCA) were generated using the pair wise unweighted UniFrac distances. □ Wild-types insects; Δ Insects fed sugarcane bagasse; ○ Insects fed cellulose; (B) Venn diagram with OTUs grouped at 97% similarity in the phylogenetic tree of bacterial clones obtained from cockroaches fed with different diets.
Figure 5Neighbor-joining phylogenetic tree of 16S rRNA gene sequences. Cockroach bacterial clones from SB (fed on sugarcane bagasse), C (fed on cellulose) or W (wild-types). Reference sequences were retrieved from Genbank (in bold). Phylogenetic trees were constructed for P. americana gut 16S rRNA bacterial sequences with reference sequences from GenBank by the neighbor-joining algorithm based on distances calculated by the Kimura-2 method.