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Bacterial Protection of Beetle-Fungus Mutualism
Journal article

Bacterial Protection of Beetle-Fungus Mutualism

Abstract

Host-microbe symbioses play a critical role in the evolution of biological diversity and complexity. In a notably intricate system, southern pine beetles use symbiotic fungi to help overcome host-tree defenses and to provide nutrition for their larvae. We show that this beetle-fungal mutualism is chemically mediated by a bacterially produced polyunsaturated peroxide. The molecule's selective toxicity toward the beetle's fungal antagonist, combined with the prevalence and localization of its bacterial source, indicates an insect-microbe association that is both mutualistic and coevolved. This unexpected finding in a well-studied system indicates that mutualistic associations between insects and antibiotic-producing bacteria are more common than currently recognized and that identifying their small-molecule mediators can provide a powerful search strategy for therapeutically useful antimicrobial compounds.

Authors

Scott JJ; Oh D-C; Yuceer MC; Klepzig KD; Clardy J; Currie CR

Journal

Science, Vol. 322, No. 5898, pp. 63–63

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

Publication Date

October 3, 2008

DOI

10.1126/science.1160423

ISSN

0036-8075

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