Symbiotic Bacterium-Derived Organic Acids Protect <i>Delia antiqua</i> Larvae from Entomopathogenic Fungal Infection
Fangyuan Zhou, Letian Xu, Xiaoqing Wu, Xiaoyan Zhao, Mei Liu, Xinjian Zhang
Abstract
The protection of associated microbiota for their animal hosts against pathogen infection has been studied widely over the last 100 years. However, how those microbes protect the animal host remains unclear. In former studies, body surface microbes of one insect, Delia antiqua , protected the insect larvae from infection with the entomopathogen Beauveria bassiana . By comparing the metabolites produced by microbes that protect the insect and microbes that cannot protect the insect, the question of how the microbes protect the insect is answered. It turns out that body surface bacteria produce a metabolite cocktail that inhibits colonization of B. bassiana and consequently protects the insect. This work reveals novel molecules with antifungal activity, which may aid in discovery and expansion of new prophylactic and therapeutic natural chemicals for treating infectious diseases.