1. Chemical Gradients of Plant Substrates in an Atta texana Fungus Garden
- Author
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Justin J. J. van der Hooft, Mingxun Wang, Daniel Petras, Madeleine Ernst, Andrés Mauricio Caraballo-Rodríguez, Sara P. Puckett, Jonathan L. Klassen, Kathleen E. Kyle, Ricardo Silva, Louis-Félix Nothias, Pieter C. Dorrestein, Marcy J. Balunas, Anupriya Tripathi, and Schadt, Christopher W
- Subjects
Chemical process ,Atta ,Bioinformatics ,Physiology ,Fungus ,Biology ,Biochemistry ,Microbiology ,Substrate degradation ,03 medical and health sciences ,Metabolomics ,Bioinformatica ,Botany ,Genetics ,Molecular cartography ,Ecosystem ,Molecular Biology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,030304 developmental biology ,Atta texana ,0303 health sciences ,Mass spectrometry ,030306 microbiology ,fungi ,technology, industry, and agriculture ,food and beverages ,biology.organism_classification ,QR1-502 ,Computer Science Applications ,Ant fungus garden ,Chemical transformation ,Modeling and Simulation ,Fungal symbiont - Abstract
Many ant species grow fungus gardens that predigest food as an essential step of the ants' nutrient uptake. These symbiotic fungus gardens have long been studied and feature a gradient of increasing substrate degradation from top to bottom. To further facilitate the study of fungus gardens and enable the understanding of the predigestion process in more detail than currently known, we applied recent mass spectrometry-based approaches and generated a three-dimensional (3D) molecular map of an Atta texana fungus garden to reveal chemical modifications as plant substrates pass through it. The metabolomics approach presented in this study can be applied to study similar processes in natural environments to compare with lab-maintained ecosystems. IMPORTANCE The study of complex ecosystems requires an understanding of the chemical processes involving molecules from several sources. Some of the molecules present in fungus-growing ants' symbiotic system originate from plants. To facilitate the study of fungus gardens from a chemical perspective, we provide a molecular map of an Atta texana fungus garden to reveal chemical modifications as plant substrates pass through it. The metabolomics approach presented in this study can be applied to study similar processes in natural environments.
- Published
- 2021
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