| Literature DB >> 31640545 |
Mazarin Akami1,2, Xue-Ming Ren1, Xuewei Qi1, Abdelaziz Mansour1,3, Bingli Gao1, Shuai Cao1, Chang-Ying Niu4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The gut bacteria of tephritid fruit flies play prominent roles in nutrition, reproduction, maintenance and ecological adaptations of the host. Here, we adopted an approach based on direct observation of symbiotic or axenic flies feeding on dishes seeded with drops of full diet (containing all amino acids) or full diet supplemented with bacteria at similar concentrations to explore the effects of intestinal bacteria on foraging decision and fitness of Bactrocera dorsalis.Entities:
Keywords: Bactrocera dorsalis; Fecundity; Foraging behavior; Probiotics; Survival
Year: 2019 PMID: 31640545 PMCID: PMC6805663 DOI: 10.1186/s12866-019-1607-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Microbiol ISSN: 1471-2180 Impact factor: 3.605
Fig. 1Response of symbiotic and axenic Bactrocera dorsalis to experimental diets (full amino acids diet or full diet + bacteria isolate). The left ordinate is the average number of flies which landed and the right ones correspond to their latency to respond. Each bar represents the marginal number of flies which landed on food patch (regardless of food quality) within an hour of observation. Means were separated with Student’s t-Test at P = 0.05
Fig. 2Number of nutritional drops consumed by females (a) and males (b) symbiotic and axenic flies (Bactrocera dorsalis) exposed to two diet patches (containing full diet and full diet + bacteria isolate, respectively). Each horizontal bar represents the Mean ± SE of drops consumed by symbiotic and axenic flies from each treatment group within an hour of observation
Fig. 3Average number of lifelong eggs laid by the female B. dorsalis. The control group was fed full diets only. (a): Symbiotic flies and (b): Axenic flies; (i): daily number of eggs laid by each female fly & (ii): average lifelong eggs lay per female. Mean bars with different letters between treatments are statistically different after Tukey’s post hoc tests at P ≤ 0.05
Fig. 4Cumulative survival and average longevity of B. dorsalis. Positive control consisted of females maintained under full diets only till death and the negative control consisted of females maintained under sugar diet only till death. (i): daily adult mortality & (ii): average longevity. P. dispersa and E. cloacae antagonistically regulated the female survival with E. faecalis and K. oxytoca. From 1 to 7 days, all the flies were protein starved and fed sugar diet only. Mean bars with different letters between treatments are statistically different after Tukey’s post hoc tests at P ≤ 0.05
Ingredients and preparation of the standard Luria Bertani (LB) agar media
| Ingredients | Amounts (g) | Preparation procedures | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Yeast extract | 2.5 | Ingredients 1–4 were put in an Erlenmeyer containing 250 mL of distilled water and the solution was mixed with a magnetic stirrer. Then distilled water was added to total volume of 500 mL and transferred to 1 L flask. The liquid was autoclaved for 20 min at 115 °C and let to cool at ~ 55 °C before pipetting 25 mL onto each petri dish plate. |
| 2 | Tryptone | 5 | |
| 3 | NaCl | 5 | |
| 4 | Agar powder | 7.5 | |
| 5 | Water | 500 | |
Note: The preparation of LB broth follows the same procedures but without agar powder
Identity of gut bacterial isolates from Bactrocera dorsalis based on 16S rRNA gene sequences
| Isolate labels | Sequence length (bp) | Best tblastn hit species | GenBank accession No. | Identity (%) | Family |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BDF-1 | 1399 |
| CP030347.1 | 99 | Enterobacteriaceae- |
| BDF-2 | 1467 |
| MG543815.1 | 99 | Enterobacteriaceae+ |
| BDF-3 | 1452 |
| NR_114152.1 | 99 | Enterobacteriaceae- |
| BDF-4 | 1433 |
| AY227805.1 | 99 | Enterobacteriaceae- |
Nutrient composition of experimental diets
| Ingredients | Components | Contents (mg) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Full diet | Sugar | ||
| Essential amino acids | L-arginine | 50.45 | |
| L-histidine | 21.54 | ||
| L-isoleucine | 26.64 | ||
| L-leucine | 51.02 | ||
| L-lysine | 27.78 | ||
| L-methionine | 13.04 | ||
| L-phenylalanine | 33.44 | ||
| L-threonine | 25.51 | ||
| L-tryptophan | 13.60 | ||
| L-valine | 37.41 | ||
| Non-essential amino acids | L-alanine | 36.85 | |
| L-aspartic acid | 53.28 | ||
| L-aspartic acid | 19.27 | ||
| L-glutamic acid | 185.36 | ||
| Glycine | 42.51 | ||
| L-proline | 58.95 | ||
| L-serine | 36.85 | ||
| L-tyrosine | 22.67 | ||
| Minerals and salts | FeSO4 | 2.50 | 2.50 |
| MnSO4 | 0.63 | 0.63 | |
| ZnCl2 | 0.63 | 0.63 | |
| CuSO4 | 0.31 | 0.31 | |
| MgSO4 | 20.00 | 20.00 | |
| KH2PO4 | 84.65 | 84.65 | |
| Ca(H2PO4)2 | 10.00 | 10.00 | |
| KCl | 117.00 | 117.00 | |
| NaCl | 45.00 | 45.00 | |
| White sugar | 10,000.0 | 10,000.0 | |
| DDW | 50,000.00 | 50,000.00 | |
F Full diet contains all amino acid, DDW Deionized distilled water
Fig. 5Experimental design for foraging assays (a) and fitness parameters assays (fecundity and longevity) (b). The full diets contain all the amino acids, and the probiotic diets contain full diet + bacteria isolate