Literature DB >> 25385629

Gill bacteria enable a novel digestive strategy in a wood-feeding mollusk.

Roberta M O'Connor1, Jennifer M Fung2, Koty H Sharp3, Jack S Benner4, Colleen McClung4, Shelley Cushing4, Elizabeth R Lamkin5, Alexey I Fomenkov4, Bernard Henrissat6, Yuri Y Londer4, Matthew B Scholz7, Janos Posfai4, Stephanie Malfatti8, Susannah G Tringe8, Tanja Woyke8, Rex R Malmstrom8, Devin Coleman-Derr8, Marvin A Altamia9, Sandra Dedrick10, Stefan T Kaluziak2, Margo G Haygood11, Daniel L Distel12.   

Abstract

Bacteria play many important roles in animal digestive systems, including the provision of enzymes critical to digestion. Typically, complex communities of bacteria reside in the gut lumen in direct contact with the ingested materials they help to digest. Here, we demonstrate a previously undescribed digestive strategy in the wood-eating marine bivalve Bankia setacea, wherein digestive bacteria are housed in a location remote from the gut. These bivalves, commonly known as shipworms, lack a resident microbiota in the gut compartment where wood is digested but harbor endosymbiotic bacteria within specialized cells in their gills. We show that this comparatively simple bacterial community produces wood-degrading enzymes that are selectively translocated from gill to gut. These enzymes, which include just a small subset of the predicted wood-degrading enzymes encoded in the endosymbiont genomes, accumulate in the gut to the near exclusion of other endosymbiont-made proteins. This strategy of remote enzyme production provides the shipworm with a mechanism to capture liberated sugars from wood without competition from an endogenous gut microbiota. Because only those proteins required for wood digestion are translocated to the gut, this newly described system reveals which of many possible enzymes and enzyme combinations are minimally required for wood degradation. Thus, although it has historically had negative impacts on human welfare, the shipworm digestive process now has the potential to have a positive impact on industries that convert wood and other plant biomass to renewable fuels, fine chemicals, food, feeds, textiles, and paper products.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Teredinidae; carbohydrate-active enzymes; endosymbionts; symbiosis; xylotrophy

Mesh:

Year:  2014        PMID: 25385629      PMCID: PMC4250168          DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1413110111

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A        ISSN: 0027-8424            Impact factor:   11.205


  53 in total

1.  Extensive variation in intracellular symbiont community composition among members of a single population of the wood-boring bivalve Lyrodus pedicellatus (Bivalvia: Teredinidae).

Authors:  Yvette A Luyten; Janelle R Thompson; Wendy Morrill; Martin F Polz; Daniel L Distel
Journal:  Appl Environ Microbiol       Date:  2006-01       Impact factor: 4.792

2.  RAxML-VI-HPC: maximum likelihood-based phylogenetic analyses with thousands of taxa and mixed models.

Authors:  Alexandros Stamatakis
Journal:  Bioinformatics       Date:  2006-08-23       Impact factor: 6.937

3.  Quantitative imaging of nitrogen fixation by individual bacteria within animal cells.

Authors:  Claude P Lechene; Yvette Luyten; Gregory McMahon; Daniel L Distel
Journal:  Science       Date:  2007-09-14       Impact factor: 47.728

4.  Velvet: algorithms for de novo short read assembly using de Bruijn graphs.

Authors:  Daniel R Zerbino; Ewan Birney
Journal:  Genome Res       Date:  2008-03-18       Impact factor: 9.043

5.  Nonhybrid, finished microbial genome assemblies from long-read SMRT sequencing data.

Authors:  Chen-Shan Chin; David H Alexander; Patrick Marks; Aaron A Klammer; James Drake; Cheryl Heiner; Alicia Clum; Alex Copeland; John Huddleston; Evan E Eichler; Stephen W Turner; Jonas Korlach
Journal:  Nat Methods       Date:  2013-05-05       Impact factor: 28.547

6.  Synergy between (13)C-metabolic flux analysis and flux balance analysis for understanding metabolic adaptation to anaerobiosis in E. coli.

Authors:  Xuewen Chen; Ana P Alonso; Doug K Allen; Jennifer L Reed; Yair Shachar-Hill
Journal:  Metab Eng       Date:  2010-12-01       Impact factor: 9.783

7.  Metagenomic profiling reveals lignocellulose degrading system in a microbial community associated with a wood-feeding beetle.

Authors:  Erin D Scully; Scott M Geib; Kelli Hoover; Ming Tien; Susannah G Tringe; Kerrie W Barry; Tijana Glavina del Rio; Mansi Chovatia; Joshua R Herr; John E Carlson
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2013-09-04       Impact factor: 3.240

8.  Genetic differentiation among isolates of Teredinibacter turnerae, a widely occurring intracellular endosymbiont of shipworms.

Authors:  Marvin A Altamia; Nicole Wood; Jennifer M Fung; Sandra Dedrick; Eric W Linton; Gisela P Concepcion; Margo G Haygood; Daniel L Distel
Journal:  Mol Ecol       Date:  2014-03       Impact factor: 6.622

9.  Complete genome sequence of the complex carbohydrate-degrading marine bacterium, Saccharophagus degradans strain 2-40 T.

Authors:  Ronald M Weiner; Larry E Taylor; Bernard Henrissat; Loren Hauser; Miriam Land; Pedro M Coutinho; Corinne Rancurel; Elizabeth H Saunders; Atkinson G Longmire; Haitao Zhang; Edward A Bayer; Harry J Gilbert; Frank Larimer; Igor B Zhulin; Nathan A Ekborg; Raphael Lamed; Paul M Richardson; Ilya Borovok; Steven Hutcheson
Journal:  PLoS Genet       Date:  2008-05-30       Impact factor: 5.917

10.  Proteomic investigation of aphid honeydew reveals an unexpected diversity of proteins.

Authors:  Ahmed Sabri; Sophie Vandermoten; Pascal D Leroy; Eric Haubruge; Thierry Hance; Philippe Thonart; Edwin De Pauw; Frédéric Francis
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2013-09-25       Impact factor: 3.240

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  28 in total

Review 1.  Physiological and Molecular Understanding of Bacterial Polysaccharide Monooxygenases.

Authors:  Marco Agostoni; John A Hangasky; Michael A Marletta
Journal:  Microbiol Mol Biol Rev       Date:  2017-06-28       Impact factor: 11.056

2.  Endoglucanase activity in Neoteredo reynei (Bivalvia, Teredinidae) digestive organs and its content.

Authors:  Daniela Toma de Moraes Akamine; Daniel de Almeida Cozendey da Silva; Gabriela de Lima Câmara; Thayane Vieira Carvalho; Michel Brienzo
Journal:  World J Microbiol Biotechnol       Date:  2018-06-01       Impact factor: 3.312

3.  Simplified and representative bacterial community of maize roots.

Authors:  Ben Niu; Joseph Nathaniel Paulson; Xiaoqi Zheng; Roberto Kolter
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2017-03-08       Impact factor: 11.205

4.  Altered Stool Microbiota of Infants with Cystic Fibrosis Shows a Reduction in Genera Associated with Immune Programming from Birth.

Authors:  Katherine M Antosca; Diana A Chernikova; Courtney E Price; Kathryn L Ruoff; Kewei Li; Margaret F Guill; Natalie R Sontag; Hilary G Morrison; Shuyu Hao; Mitchell L Drumm; Todd A MacKenzie; Dana B Dorman; Lynn M Feenan; Molly A Williams; John Dessaint; Irene H Yuan; Brian J Aldrich; Lisa A Moulton; Lily Ting; Ana Martinez-Del Campo; Edward J Stewart; Margaret R Karagas; George A O'Toole; Juliette C Madan
Journal:  J Bacteriol       Date:  2019-07-24       Impact factor: 3.490

5.  Discovery of chemoautotrophic symbiosis in the giant shipworm Kuphus polythalamia (Bivalvia: Teredinidae) extends wooden-steps theory.

Authors:  Daniel L Distel; Marvin A Altamia; Zhenjian Lin; J Reuben Shipway; Andrew Han; Imelda Forteza; Rowena Antemano; Ma Gwen J Peñaflor Limbaco; Alison G Tebo; Rande Dechavez; Julie Albano; Gary Rosenberg; Gisela P Concepcion; Eric W Schmidt; Margo G Haygood
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2017-04-17       Impact factor: 11.205

6.  Nitrogenase diversity and activity in the gastrointestinal tract of the wood-eating catfish Panaque nigrolineatus.

Authors:  Ryan McDonald; Fan Zhang; Joy E M Watts; Harold J Schreier
Journal:  ISME J       Date:  2015-04-24       Impact factor: 10.302

7.  Shipworm symbiosis ecology-guided discovery of an antibiotic that kills colistin-resistant Acinetobacter.

Authors:  Bailey W Miller; Albebson L Lim; Zhenjian Lin; Jeannie Bailey; Kari L Aoyagi; Mark A Fisher; Louis R Barrows; Colin Manoil; Eric W Schmidt; Margo G Haygood
Journal:  Cell Chem Biol       Date:  2021-06-18       Impact factor: 8.116

8.  Ralstonia solanacearum lipopeptide induces chlamydospore development in fungi and facilitates bacterial entry into fungal tissues.

Authors:  Joseph E Spraker; Laura M Sanchez; Tiffany M Lowe; Pieter C Dorrestein; Nancy P Keller
Journal:  ISME J       Date:  2016-03-04       Impact factor: 10.302

9.  Symbiotic Bacteria in Gills and Guts of Chinese Mitten Crab (Eriocheir sinensis) Differ from the Free-Living Bacteria in Water.

Authors:  Meiling Zhang; Yuhong Sun; Liqiao Chen; Chunfang Cai; Fang Qiao; Zhenyu Du; Erchao Li
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2016-01-28       Impact factor: 3.240

10.  Bacteriome-Localized Intracellular Symbionts in Pollen-Feeding Beetles of the Genus Dasytes (Coleoptera, Dasytidae).

Authors:  Benjamin Weiss; Martin Kaltenpoth
Journal:  Front Microbiol       Date:  2016-09-22       Impact factor: 5.640

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