Litcius/Paper detail

Gut Bacteria Mediate Nutrient Availability in <i>Drosophila</i> Diets

Danielle Lesperance, Nichole A. Broderick

2020Applied and Environmental Microbiology40 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Both in the laboratory and in nature, D. melanogaster -associated microbes serve as nutritional effectors, either through the production of metabolites or as direct sources of protein biomass. The relationship between the microbiome and the resulting host nutritional physiology is significantly impacted by diet composition, yet studies involving D. melanogaster are performed using a wide range of artificial diets, making it difficult to discern which aspects of host-microbe interactions may be universal or diet dependent. In this study, we utilized three standard D. melanogaster diets and a natural grape diet to form a comprehensive understanding of the quantifiable nutritional changes mediated by the host microbial community. We then altered these artificial diets based on the observed microbe-mediated changes to demonstrate their potential to influence host physiology, allowing us to identify nutritional factors whose effects were either universal for the three artificial diets or dependent on host diet composition.

Topics & Concepts

Drosophila melanogasterBiologyHost (biology)MicrobiomeEffectorNutrientGut microbiomeBacteriaMelanogasterGut floraFood scienceEcologyGeneticsBiochemistryGeneInsect symbiosis and bacterial influencesInsect Utilization and EffectsInvertebrate Immune Response Mechanisms