A gut commensal bacterium promotes black soldier fly larval growth and development partly via modulation of intestinal protein metabolism

肠道共生细菌部分通过调节肠道蛋白质代谢促进黑水虻幼虫的生长和发育

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作者:Xingyu Luo, Gangqi Fang, Kuangqin Chen, Yu Song, Tianyi Lu, Jeffery K Tomberlin, Shuai Zhan, Yongping Huang

Abstract

Black solider fly larvae and the gut microbiota can recycle nutrients from various organic wastes into valuable insect biomass. We found that Citrobacter amalonaticus, a gut commensal bacterium of the insect, exerts beneficial effects on larval growth and development and that the expression of many metabolic larval genes was significantly impacted by the symbiont. To identify the larval genes involved in the host-symbiont interaction, we engineered the symbiont to produce double-strand RNA and enabled the strain to silence host genes in the larval gut environment where the interaction takes place. With this approach, we confirmed that two intestinal protease families are involved in the interaction and provided further evidence that intestinal protein metabolism plays a role in the interaction. This work expands the genetic toolkits available to study the insect functional genomics and host-symbiont interaction and provide the prospective for the future application of gut microbiota on the large-scale bioconversion.

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