适应
碳水化合物代谢
产热
寄主(生物学)
生物
生态学
生物化学
脂肪组织
作者
Min Tang,Li Chenyi,X. F. Ge,Yu Kuang,Lifei Qiu,Kevin Chun Chan,Zhiwei Chen,Lizhen Guo,Zhunan Zhao,Bingxin Zhang,Shanlin Liu,Xin Zhou
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41522-025-00798-4
摘要
How gut symbionts contribute to host adaptation remains largely elusive. Studying co-diversified honeybees and gut bacteria across climates, we found cold-adapted species (Apis mellifera, A. cerana) exhibit enhanced genomic capacity for glucose, pyruvate, lipid and glucuronate production versus tropical species. Metagenomics revealed Gilliamella as the most enriched gut bacterium in cold-adapted bees. Germ-free honeybees inoculated with the Gilliamella from A. cerana showed increased activity, body temperature and fat storage upon cold exposure. Saccharide metabolomics demonstrated higher hindgut glucose levels in Gilliamella-colonized A. mellifera versus germ-free bees, and in A. cerana versus three sympatric tropical species. Although Gilliamella can hydrolyze β-glucan into glucose, cultural experiments suggest it preferentially degrades glucuronate to pyruvate. In turn, monocolonized bees upregulated hindgut glucose/pyruvate utilization while increasing glucuronate provision, suggesting nutritional complementarity. Gilliamella's transporter genes predominantly target ascorbate (a glucuronate derivative), which is elevated in inoculated hindguts. Accordingly, Gilliamella converts ascorbate to D-xylulose-5P (promoting lipogenesis), while showing reduced growth on glucuronate/ascorbate versus glucose, potentially minimizing glucose competition with hosts. We revealed a highly coordinated host-symbiont metabolic synergy enhancing host energy acquisition for cold adaptation.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI