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Published February 2011 | Supplemental Material
Journal Article Open

Genes for selenium dependent and independent formate dehydrogenase in the gut microbial communities of three lower, wood-feeding termites and a wood-feeding roach

Abstract

The bacterial Wood-Ljungdahl pathway for CO_2-reductive acetogenesis is important for the nutritional mutualism occurring between wood-feeding insects and their hindgut microbiota. A key step in this pathway is the reduction of CO_2 to formate, catalysed by the enzyme formate dehydrogenase (FDH). Putative selenocysteine- (Sec) and cysteine- (Cys) containing paralogues of hydrogenase-linked FDH (FDH_H) have been identified in the termite gut acetogenic spirochete, Treponema primitia, but knowledge of their relevance in the termite gut environment remains limited. In this study, we designed degenerate PCR primers for FDH_H genes (fdhF) and assessed fdhF diversity in insect gut bacterial isolates and the gut microbial communities of termites and cockroaches. The insects examined herein represent three wood-feeding termite families, Termopsidae, Kalotermitidae and Rhinotermitidae (phylogenetically 'lower' termite taxa); the wood-feeding roach family Cryptocercidae (the sister taxon to termites); and the omnivorous roach family Blattidae. Sec and Cys FDH_H variants were identified in every wood-feeding insect but not the omnivorous roach. Of 68 novel alleles obtained from inventories, 66 affiliated phylogenetically with enzymes from T. primitia. These formed two subclades (37 and 29 phylotypes) almost completely comprised of Sec-containing and Cys-containing enzymes respectively. A gut cDNA inventory showed transcription of both variants in the termite Zootermopsis nevadensis (family Termopsidae). The gene patterns suggest that FDH_H enzymes are important for the CO_2-reductive metabolism of uncultured acetogenic treponemes and imply that the availability of selenium, a trace element, shaped microbial gene content in the last common ancestor of dictyopteran, wood-feeding insects, and continues to shape it to this day.

Additional Information

© 2010 Society for Applied Microbiology and Blackwell Publishing Ltd. Received 3 November, 2009; accepted 18 July, 2010. Article first published online: 1 Sep. 2010. This research was supported by NSF Grant DEB-0321753 (J.R.L.) and a NSF predoctoral fellowship (X.Z.). We thank J. Switzer-Blum for the microbial isolates Citrobacter sp. str. TSA-1, J. Breznak for S. grimesii str. ZFX-1 and C. Nalepa for Cryptocercus specimens. We thank previous and current members of the Leadbetter laboratory for their helpful discussions and comments. Accession numbers: Sequences recovered in this study were deposited in GenBank under Accession Nos GQ922348–GQ922450, GU563432–GU563485, HM208259 and HM208251.

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