Animal–microorganism symbioses are omnipresent, with both partners often gaining benefits as mutualists. A single mutation in the carbon catabolite repression system in Escherichia coli enables mutualism with the stinkbug Plautia stali. Here we find that this mutation is not present in natural symbioses. Given that the carbon catabolite repression pathway affects the expression of >500 downstream genes, we investigated their role in mutualisms. We find that disruption of a single gene, tnaA, encoding tryptophanase makes E. coli mutualistic to P. stali, resulting in the accumulation of tryptophan and the reduction of toxic indole. A survey of wild populations of P. stali and other stinkbug species revealed that their typical microbial symbionts, Pantoea, consistently lack the tnaA gene. Some Pantoea species such as Pantoea ananatis retain the tnaA gene and cannot establish symbiosis with P. stali, but tnaA-disrupted P. ananatis partially restored the symbiotic capability. When a natural Pantoea mutualist of P. stali was transformed with a functional tna operon, its symbiotic capability reduced significantly. Our finding suggests that tryptophanase disruption may have facilitated the evolution of gut bacterial mutualists in insects. Disruption of a single gene encoding tryptophanase makes Escherichia coli mutualistic in a stinkbug model owing to the accumulation of tryptophan and a reduction in toxic indole. This gene is typically lacking in symbionts of wild stinkbugs.
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Yayun Wang
Minoru Moriyama
Ryuichi Koga
Nature Microbiology
The University of Tokyo
Kyushu University
National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology
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Wang et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69a3d7baec16d51705d2dff2 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41564-026-02264-z