Partner choice: How does a host select and control its microbiome?

Lead Research Organisation: University of East Anglia
Department Name: Biological Sciences

Abstract

A group of ants in tropical America, known as the attines, evolved agriculture 50-60 million years ago. These ants collect plant material and take it back to their nests, where they chew it up and feed it to a special fungus that is only able to live in attine ant nests. The most highly evolved attines are known as leafcutters because they actively cut leaves from high up in the rainforest canopy and carry them back as food for their fungus. In return for housing and food, the fungus produces fat- and sugar-rich structures, called gongylidia that the ants harvest as food. Scientists call this co-dependence a mutualism because the ants and the fungus mutually benefit each other.

The ants protect their valuable fungal gardens by weeding out unwanted microbes (fungi and bacteria), which, if not controlled, would eventually consume the garden. The ants also apply antibiotics to kill the foreign microbes. They get the antibiotics from another mutualist, a special set of filamentous bacteria, called actinomycetes, which are famous (amongst biologists) for making many kinds of antibiotics. The actinomycetes are mutualists with the ant and the fungus garden, because the bacteria fight disease, and in return, live on the ant bodies, where specialised glands appear to feed the bacteria.

With previous NERC funding we have shown that different actinomycete bacteria live on the ants and provide a mixture of antibiotics, probably to slow down the evolution of antibiotic resistance in the diseases that invade the fungus gardens. Biologists call the bacterial communities that live on a host organism its microbiome. In the attine microbiome, one group of actinomycetes, known as Pseudonocardia, have been handed down over generations (vertically transmitted), and have adapted to their ant hosts. Other actinomycetes, mostly in a group called Streptomyces, appear to be acquired anew from the soil in each generation (horizontal transmission). This is surprising, because the soil is full of bacteria, most of which are not Streptomyces, but somehow the ant is able to selectively take up useful, antibiotic-producing bacteria from their environment, and not harmful or useless bacteria. How does the ant make the right Partner Choice? We have shown that to invade an ant covered in Pseudonocardia another bacterial strain must make antibiotics so it can fight the Pseudonocardia for some space and it must also be resistant to antibiotics made by the Pseudonocardia so it doesn't get killed. We call this SCREENING and it results in a microbiome dominated by antibiotic-producing and -resistant bacteria, which, of course, is the desired outcome for the ant because it gets a mixture of antibiotics to use.

In this new project we want to understand this system at an even deeper level, taking apart both the Pseudonocardia mutualists to understand the antibiotics they produce and how they influence 'Partner Choice' and to test whether the ants really do provide food to the bacteria and whether this is private to Pseudonocardia or public, that is, available to all bacteria. We also plan experiments to find out exactly which bacteria are present on these leafcutter ant cuticles and exactly where they are on individual ants. In this way we will build the first 3D microbiome maps of an animal host and overlay it with maps of the most abundantly produced antibiotics. The advantage of using attine ants to study and model these microbiomes is that they are easy to keep and their microbiome is on the outside, which means we can do experiments with it. This gives us hope that we can work out general principles governing how to create and manage protective microbiomes in free-living marine and terrestrial systems, including all land plants.

Planned Impact

The main beneficiaries of the proposed research will be the academic research community (see academic beneficiaries) who will benefit from the models we build from this work, the tools and techniques we develop and the results that we will publish in top class journals and present at national and international academic conferences in both microbiology and natural product chemistry.

The general public will also benefit since we will develop materials to explain our research, including an < 2 minute animation that we will have made and upload to our existing website (examples at www.uea.ac.uk/leafcutter-ants) to explain the concepts behind the research to a general audience. Experience suggests this is an excellent way of explaining complex scientific concepts to a lay audience. We will present our research at local and national public 'outreach' events and we will produce marketing materials to giveaway at these events with our web address, contact details and key facts about the project. We will apply to a major public event (e.g. the Royal Society Summer Science Exhibition and / or Big Bang science fair) with an exhibit on microbiomes in the final two years of the project. We successfully presented an exhibit about leafcutter ants and their antibiotic use at the Royal Society Summer Science Exhibition in 2014 so we are experienced in this area. We will also reach the public by engaging with the media via our press office when we publish the results of this study. This will ensure there is impact from this research beyond academia.

There is also scope for the discovery and development of novel IP in the form of new antibiotics and their encoding gene clusters and strains. This has the potential for economic and social benefits since it is feasible that some of the antibiotics we discover could subsequently be developed and modified for the clinic, thus promoting both health and wealth. We will continue to liaise closely with our tech transfer offices to protect and exploit any novel IP that arises from this work.

Publications

10 25 50
 
Description We have discovered how animal hosts assemble and maintain beneficial microbial communities and how they use antibiotics to protect themselves against disease
Exploitation Route By applying the mathematical models we have built to predict microbiome formation and the tolls we developed to switch on antibiotic production in cultures bacterial strains
Sectors Chemicals,Environment,Healthcare

URL http://www.uea.ac.uk/leafcutter-ants
 
Description Regulation, biosynthesis and mode of action of formicamycins, promising new antibiotics with a high barrier to resistanc
Amount £378,577 (GBP)
Funding ID BB/S00811X/1 
Organisation Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC) 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 03/2019 
End 03/2022
 
Description Big Bang Science Fair 2015 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Schools
Results and Impact Big Bang is the largest science fair in the UK - had about 75000 visitors over four days
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2015
URL http://www.facebook.com/AntibioticHunters
 
Description Exhibit and public lecture at Norwich Science Festival 2016 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Regional
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact Public lecture and interactive exhibit at Norwich Science Festival (which I helped launch in 2016)
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2016
URL http://norwichsciencefestival.co.uk
 
Description Interactive exhibit at the Latitude Music festival 2017 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact Interactive exhibition
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2017
 
Description SAW Trust book on Antibiotics 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Schools
Results and Impact We carried out a series of SAW Trust workshops about antibiotics with schools, writers and artists and published a book in October 2017
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2017
URL http://www.sawtrust.org/buy-the-books/saw-antibiotics/
 
Description UEA London Lecture 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact Public Lecture in London on Antibiotics - also live streamed and recorded for the UEA website.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2015
URL http://www.uea.ac.uk/leafcutter-ants