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Dive into the research topics where Saria Otani is active.

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Featured researches published by Saria Otani.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Complementary symbiont contributions to plant decomposition in a fungus-farming termite

Michael Poulsen; Haofu Hu; Cai Li; Zhensheng Chen; Luohao Xu; Saria Otani; Sanne Nygaard; Tania Nobre; Sylvia Klaubauf; Philipp M. Schindler; Hailin Pan; Zhikai Yang; A.S.M. Sonnenberg; Z. Wilhelm; Yong Zhang; Michael J. Wingfield; Cornelis J. P. Grimmelikhuijzen; Judith Korb; Duur K. Aanen; Jun Wang; Jacobus J. Boomsma; Guojie Zhang

Significance Old World (sub)tropical fungus-growing termites owe their massive ecological footprints to an advanced symbiosis with Termitomyces fungi. They also have abundant gut bacteria, but the complementarity roles of these symbionts have remained unclear. We analyzed the genomic potential for biomass decomposition in a farming termite, its fungal symbiont, and its bacterial gut communities. We found that plant biomass conversion is mostly a multistage complementary cooperation between Termitomyces and gut bacteria, with termite farmers primarily providing the gut compartments, foraging, and nest building. A mature queen had highly reduced gut microbial diversity for decomposition enzymes, suggesting she had an exclusively fungal diet even though she may have been the source of the gut microbes of the colony’s first workers and soldiers. Termites normally rely on gut symbionts to decompose organic matter but the Macrotermitinae domesticated Termitomyces fungi to produce their own food. This transition was accompanied by a shift in the composition of the gut microbiota, but the complementary roles of these bacteria in the symbiosis have remained enigmatic. We obtained high-quality annotated draft genomes of the termite Macrotermes natalensis, its Termitomyces symbiont, and gut metagenomes from workers, soldiers, and a queen. We show that members from 111 of the 128 known glycoside hydrolase families are represented in the symbiosis, that Termitomyces has the genomic capacity to handle complex carbohydrates, and that worker gut microbes primarily contribute enzymes for final digestion of oligosaccharides. This apparent division of labor is consistent with the Macrotermes gut microbes being most important during the second passage of comb material through the termite gut, after a first gut passage where the crude plant substrate is inoculated with Termitomyces asexual spores so that initial fungal growth and polysaccharide decomposition can proceed with high efficiency. Complex conversion of biomass in termite mounds thus appears to be mainly accomplished by complementary cooperation between a domesticated fungal monoculture and a specialized bacterial community. In sharp contrast, the gut microbiota of the queen had highly reduced plant decomposition potential, suggesting that mature reproductives digest fungal material provided by workers rather than plant substrate.


Molecular Ecology | 2014

Identifying the core microbial community in the gut of fungus-growing termites

Saria Otani; Aram Mikaelyan; Tânia Nobre; Lars Hestbjerg Hansen; Ngolo Abdoulaye Kone; Søren J. Sørensen; Duur K. Aanen; Jacobus J. Boomsma; Andreas Brune; Michael Poulsen

Gut microbes play a crucial role in decomposing lignocellulose to fuel termite societies, with protists in the lower termites and prokaryotes in the higher termites providing these services. However, a single basal subfamily of the higher termites, the Macrotermitinae, also domesticated a plant biomass‐degrading fungus (Termitomyces), and how this symbiont acquisition has affected the fungus‐growing termite gut microbiota has remained unclear. The objective of our study was to compare the intestinal bacterial communities of five genera (nine species) of fungus‐growing termites to establish whether or not an ancestral core microbiota has been maintained and characterizes extant lineages. Using 454‐pyrosequencing of the 16S rRNA gene, we show that gut communities have representatives of 26 bacterial phyla and are dominated by Firmicutes, Bacteroidetes, Spirochaetes, Proteobacteria and Synergistetes. A set of 42 genus‐level taxa was present in all termite species and accounted for 56–68% of the species‐specific reads. Gut communities of termites from the same genus were more similar than distantly related species, suggesting that phylogenetic ancestry matters, possibly in connection with specific termite genus‐level ecological niches. Finally, we show that gut communities of fungus‐growing termites are similar to cockroaches, both at the bacterial phylum level and in a comparison of the core Macrotermitinae taxa abundances with representative cockroach, lower termite and higher nonfungus‐growing termites. These results suggest that the obligate association with Termitomyces has forced the bacterial gut communities of the fungus‐growing termites towards a relatively uniform composition with higher similarity to their omnivorous relatives than to more closely related termites.


Nature Ecology and Evolution | 2018

Hemimetabolous genomes reveal molecular basis of termite eusociality

Mark C. Harrison; Evelien Jongepier; Hugh M. Robertson; Nicolas Arning; Tristan Bitard-Feildel; Hsu Chao; Christopher P. Childers; Huyen Dinh; HarshaVardhan Doddapaneni; Shannon Dugan; Johannes Gowin; Carolin Greiner; Yi Han; Haofu Hu; Daniel S.T. Hughes; Ann Kathrin Huylmans; Carsten Kemena; Lukas P.M. Kremer; Sandra L. Lee; Alberto Lopez-Ezquerra; Ludovic Mallet; Jose M. Monroy-Kuhn; Annabell Moser; Shwetha C. Murali; Donna M. Muzny; Saria Otani; Maria Dolors Piulachs; Monica Poelchau; Jiaxin Qu; Florentine Schaub

Around 150 million years ago, eusocial termites evolved from within the cockroaches, 50 million years before eusocial Hymenoptera, such as bees and ants, appeared. Here, we report the 2-Gb genome of the German cockroach, Blattella germanica, and the 1.3-Gb genome of the drywood termite Cryptotermes secundus. We show evolutionary signatures of termite eusociality by comparing the genomes and transcriptomes of three termites and the cockroach against the background of 16 other eusocial and non-eusocial insects. Dramatic adaptive changes in genes underlying the production and perception of pheromones confirm the importance of chemical communication in the termites. These are accompanied by major changes in gene regulation and the molecular evolution of caste determination. Many of these results parallel molecular mechanisms of eusocial evolution in Hymenoptera. However, the specific solutions are remarkably different, thus revealing a striking case of convergence in one of the major evolutionary transitions in biological complexity.Eusociality evolved independently in Hymenoptera and in termites. Here, the authors sequence genomes of the German cockroach and a drywood termite and provide insights into the evolutionary signatures of termite eusociality.


Organic Letters | 2016

Pseudoxylallemycins A–F, Cyclic Tetrapeptides with Rare Allenyl Modifications Isolated from Pseudoxylaria sp. X802: A Competitor of Fungus-Growing Termite Cultivars

Huijuan Guo; Nina B. Kreuzenbeck; Saria Otani; María García-Altares; Hans Martin Dahse; Christiane Weigel; Duur K. Aanen; Christian Hertweck; Michael Poulsen; Christine Beemelmanns

Based on fungus-fungus pairing assays and HRMS-based dereplication strategy, six new cyclic tetrapeptides, pseudoxylallemycins A-F (1-6), were isolated from the termite-associated fungus Pseudoxylaria sp. X802. Structures were characterized using NMR spectroscopy, HRMS, and Marfeys reaction. Pseudoxylallemycins B-D (2-4) possess a rare and chemically accessible allene moiety amenable for synthetic modifications, and derivatives A-D showed antimicrobial activity against Gram-negative human-pathogenic Pseudomonas aeruginosa and antiproliferative activity against human umbilical vein endothelial cells and K-562 cell lines.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2015

The Enterobacterium Trabulsiella odontotermitis Presents Novel Adaptations Related to Its Association with Fungus-Growing Termites.

Panagiotis Sapountzis; Thijs Gruntjes; Saria Otani; James Estevez; Rafael R. da Costa; Guy Plunkett; Nicole T. Perna; Michael Poulsen

ABSTRACT Fungus-growing termites rely on symbiotic microorganisms to help break down plant material and to obtain nutrients. Their fungal cultivar, Termitomyces, is the main plant degrader and food source for the termites, while gut bacteria complement Termitomyces in the degradation of foodstuffs, fixation of nitrogen, and metabolism of amino acids and sugars. Due to the community complexity and because these typically anaerobic bacteria can rarely be cultured, little is known about the physiological capabilities of individual bacterial members of the gut communities and their associations with the termite host. The bacterium Trabulsiella odontotermitis is associated with fungus-growing termites, but this genus is generally understudied, with only two described species. Taking diverse approaches, we obtained a solid phylogenetic placement of T. odontotermitis among the Enterobacteriaceae, investigated the physiology and enzymatic profiles of T. odontotermitis isolates, determined the localization of the bacterium in the termite gut, compared draft genomes of two T. odontotermitis isolates to those of their close relatives, and examined the expression of genes relevant to host colonization and putative symbiont functions. Our findings support the hypothesis that T. odontotermitis is a facultative symbiont mainly located in the paunch compartment of the gut, with possible roles in carbohydrate metabolism and aflatoxin degradation, while displaying adaptations to association with the termite host, such as expressing genes for a type VI secretion system which has been demonstrated to assist bacterial competition, colonization, and survival within hosts.


PLOS ONE | 2017

Pycnoscelus surinamensis cockroach gut microbiota respond consistently to a fungal diet without mirroring those of fungus-farming termites

Callum Richards; Saria Otani; Aram Mikaelyan; Michael Poulsen

The gut microbiotas of cockroaches and termites play important roles in the symbiotic digestion of dietary components, such as lignocellulose. Diet has been proposed as a primary determinant of community structure within the gut, acting as a selection force to shape the diversity observed within this “bioreactor”, and as a key factor for the divergence of the termite gut microbiota from the omnivorous cockroach ancestor. The gut microbiota in most termites supports primarily the breakdown of lignocellulose, but the fungus-farming sub-family of higher termites has become similar in gut microbiota to the ancestral omnivorous cockroaches. To assess the importance of a fungus diet as a driver of community structure, we compare community compositions in the guts of experimentally manipulated Pycnoscelus surinamensis cockroaches fed on fungus cultivated by fungus-farming termites. MiSeq amplicon analysis of gut microbiotas from 49 gut samples showed a step-wise gradient pattern in community similarity that correlated with an increase in the proportion of fungal material provided to the cockroaches. Comparison of the taxonomic composition of manipulated communities to that of gut communities of a fungus-feeding termite species showed that although some bacteria OTUs shared by P. surinamensis and the farming termites increased in the guts of cockroaches on a fungal diet, cockroach communities remained distinct from those of termites. These results demonstrate that a fungal diet can play a role in structuring gut community composition, but at the same time exemplifies how original community compositions constrain the magnitude of such change.


Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution | 2016

Transitional Complexity of Social Insect Immunity

Saria Otani; Nick Bos; Sze Huei Yek

Genomic analyses between insects are often conducted by comparing host genomes to that of Drosophila. For honey bees, this led to the claim that the evolutionary transition to eusociality resulted in a reduction of immunity-related genes. Although this claim pervades the literature, contradictory evidence exists. Many genomic studies, however, are not comparable due to methodological differences, and only focus on the physiological aspect of the immune system, thus potentially missing other immunity components. We advocate more comprehensive comparative studies, as well as the analysis of insect-associated defensive microbiotas to improve our understanding of the complexity of social insect immunity.


bioRxiv | 2018

Gut microbial compositions mirror caste-specific diets in a major lineage of eusocial insects

Saria Otani; Mariya Zhukova; Ngolo Abdoulaye Kone; Rafael R. da Costa; Aram Mikaelyan; Panagiotis Sapountzis; Michael Poulsen

Eusocial insects owe their ecological success to the division of labour and processes within colonies often rely on the presence of specific microbial symbionts, but associations between microbial community compositions and castes with different tasks and diets within colonies remain largely unexplored. Fungus-growing termites evolved to use fungi to externally degrade plant material, complemented by specific and complex gut microbiotas. Here we explore to which extent division of labour and dietary differences within fungus-growing termite castes are linked to gut bacterial community structure. Using amplicon sequencing, we characterise community compositions in sterile (worker and soldier) and reproductive (queen and king) termites and combine this with gut enzyme, microscopy, and in situ analyses to further elucidate sterile caste-specific microbiota compositions. Gut bacterial communities are structured primarily according to termite caste and genus. In contrast to the observed rich and diverse sterile caste microbiotas, royal pair microbiotas are extremely skewed and dominated by few bacterial taxa, reflecting the specialised dietary intake and unique, reproduction-centred lifestyle of the queen and king.


Microbial Ecology | 2016

Bacterial communities in termite fungus combs are comprised of consistent gut deposits and contributions from the environment

Saria Otani; Lars Hestbjerg Hansen; Søren J. Sørensen; Michael Poulsen


Archive | 2014

Identifying the core microbial community in fungus-growing termite guts

Saria Otani; Aram Mikaelyan; Tania Nobre; Søren J. Sørensen; Ngolo Abdoulaye Kone; Duur K. Aanen; Jacobus J. Boomsma; Andreas Brune; Michael Poulsen; Lars Henrik Hansen

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Duur K. Aanen

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Haofu Hu

University of Copenhagen

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Ngolo Abdoulaye Kone

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Guojie Zhang

University of Copenhagen

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