Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Tier 3 — Observational / field trialPreprint

Core Bacterial and Host Fruit-Specific Yeast Microbiota in a Polyphagous Fly Pest

Dunis, S.; Lapegue, M.; Deschamps, C.; Cesari, L.; Loiseau, A.; Facon, B.; Rode, N.

bioRxiv · 2026

Read source ↗ All evidence

Summary

Holometabolous polyphagous insects undergo complete metamorphosis and exploit multiple host plants, exposing them to highly variable ecological conditions across both life stages and host plants. Whether these species, like specialist ones, harbour a stable core microbiota, or whether life stages or host plants act as the primary drivers of microbiota assembly remain open questions. Here, we characterized the fungal and bacterial communities associated with Drosophila suzukii across life stages and host fruits using 16S and ITS metabarcoding. We tested the relative influence of life stage and host fruit on microbiota composition, using community and network-based analyses. We first identified that host fruit significantly structured fungal communities, but not bacterial ones. Yeast communities were rather fruit-specific: Hanseniaspora and Pichia mostly associated with cherries and strawberries, contrary to Metschnikowia with blackberries. In contrast, bacteria and filamentous fungi were shared across fruits, constituting for fruits a core microbiota dominated by Gluconobacter cerinus, Tatumella and Cladosporium. Second, we found that both bacterial and fungal D. suzukii communities were structured by life stage, and that fungal, but not bacterial communities, were also structured by host fruits. D. suzukii individuals harboured a core bacteria composed of G. cerinus and a niche-specific microbiota composed of yeasts: Hanseniaspora typical in individuals related to cherry and strawberry, and Metschnikowia to blackberry. Components of both core and niche-specific microbiota were most likely horizontally acquired by D. suzukii from host fruits. Taken together our results underline the importance of meta-community approaches to investigate tripartite interactions among insects, host plants and microbiota.

Outcomes reported

Holometabolous polyphagous insects undergo complete metamorphosis and exploit multiple host plants, exposing them to highly variable ecological conditions across both life stages and host plants. Whether these species, like specialist ones, harbour a stable core microbiota, or whether life stages or host plants act as the primary drivers of microbiota assembly remain open questions. Here, we characterized the fungal and bacterial communities associated with Drosophila suzukii across life stages and host fruits using 16S and ITS metabarcoding. We tested the relative influence of life stage and host fruit on microbiota composition, using community and network-based analyses. We first identified that host fruit significantly structured fungal communities, but not bacterial ones. Yeast communities were rather fruit-specific: Hanseniaspora and Pichia mostly associated with cherries and strawberries, contrary to Metschnikowia with blackberries. In contrast, bacteria and filamentous fungi were shared across fruits, constituting for fruits a core microbiota dominated by Gluconobacter cerinus, Tatumella and Cladosporium. Second, we found that both bacterial and fungal D. suzukii communities were structured by life stage, and that fungal, but not bacterial communities, were also structured by host fruits. D. suzukii individuals harboured a core bacteria composed of G. cerinus and a niche-specific microbiota composed of yeasts: Hanseniaspora typical in individuals related to cherry and strawberry, and Metschnikowia to blackberry. Components of both core and niche-specific microbiota were most likely horizontally acquired by D. suzukii from host fruits. Taken together our results underline the importance of meta-community approaches to investigate tripartite interactions among insects, host plants and microbiota.

Theme
Farming systems, soils & land use
Subject
Gut microbiome & human health
Study type
Research
Source type
Preprint
Status
Preprint
Geography
United Kingdom
System type
Horticulture
DOI
10.64898/2026.04.24.720762
Catalogue ID
IRmoq83umo-92625e
Pulse AI · ask about this record

Dig deeper with Pulse AI.

Pulse AI has read the whole catalogue. Ask about this record, its theme, or how the findings apply to UK farming and policy — every answer cites the underlying studies.