SRR19543161 - Anastrepha obliqua

Basic Information

Run: SRR19543161

Assay Type: WGS

Bioproject: PRJNA845910

Biosample: SAMN28864714

Bytes: 367478912

Center Name: UNIVERSIDAD DEL VALLE

Sequencing Information

Instrument: Illumina NovaSeq 6000

Library Layout: PAIRED

Library Selection: size fractionation

Platform: ILLUMINA

Geographic Information

Country: Colombia

Continent: South America

Location Name: Colombia: Chagres

Latitude/Longitude: 3.07 N 76.36 W

Sample Information

Host: Anastrepha obliqua

Isolation: insect larva tissue

Biosample Model: Metagenome or environmental

Collection Date: 2020-11-21

Taxonomic Classification

Potential Symbionts

Based on our current records database, this section aims to identify potential functional symbionts in this metagenome sample, with scoring based on:

  • Relative abundance in sample
  • Species-level matches with known symbionts
  • Host insect order matches
  • Functional record completeness

Note: Showing top 3 highest scoring records for each species/genus

Symbiont Name Record Host Species Function Abundance
Score
Enterobacter sp. T2
RISB0893
Bactrocera dorsalis
Order: Diptera
be beneficial, with some quality control indices, such as adult size, pupal weight, survival rate under stress and nutritionally rich conditions, and mating competitiveness, being significantly increased, while slight nonsignificant increases in emergence rate and flight ability were observed
32.03%
52.0
Enterobacter sp. T2
RISB1338
Ceratitis capitata
Order: Diptera
Enterobacter sp. AA26 dry biomass can fully replace the brewer’s yeast as a protein source in medfly larval diet without any effect on the productivity and the biological quality of reared medfly of VIENNA 8 GSS
32.03%
51.3
Enterobacter sp. T2
RISB1311
Ceratitis capitata
Order: Diptera
it was shown to have positive effects in rearing efficiency when used as larval probiotics
32.03%
48.8
Gluconobacter
RISB0016
Aedes aegypti
Order: Diptera
Gluconobacter might increase the susceptibility of Ae. aegypti to CHIKV infection.
11.60%
23.2
Gluconobacter
RISB1882
Drosophila suzukii
Order: Diptera
produce volatile substances that attract female D. suzukii
11.60%
22.8
Gluconobacter
RISB0876
Drosophila suzukii
Order: Diptera
None
11.60%
21.6
Stenotrophomonas maltophilia
RISB1227
Delia antiqua
Order: Diptera
six bacteria protect larvae from infection with the entomopathogen Beauveria bassiana through symbiotic bacterium-derived organic acids
3.17%
20.9
Stenotrophomonas maltophilia
RISB1141
Hermetia illucens
Order: Diptera
enhance the insect growth performance when reared on an unbalanced nutritionally poor diet
3.17%
20.0
Stenotrophomonas maltophilia
RISB1401
Delia antiqua
Order: Diptera
suppressed Beauveria bassiana conidia germination and hyphal growth
3.17%
19.5
Morganella morganii
RISB0772
Delia antiqua
Order: Diptera
showed significant volatile inhibition activity against fungal entomopathogen Fusarium moniliforme, Botryosphaeria dothidea and both Fusarium oxysporum respectively
0.20%
18.5
Morganella morganii
RISB0008
Phormia regina
Order: Diptera
deterred oviposition by female stable flies; The flies' oviposition decisions appear to be guided by bacteria-derived semiochemicals as the bacteria
0.20%
18.2
Morganella morganii
RISB0611
Bactrocera dorsalis
Order: Diptera
may hydrolysing nitrogenous waste and providing metabolizable nitrogen for B. dorsalis
0.20%
16.9
Bacillus cereus
RISB1872
Aedes aegypti
Order: Diptera
gut microbiome
1.19%
16.5
Lactiplantibacillus plantarum
RISB0674
Drosophila melanogaster
Order: Diptera
could effectively inhibit fungal spore germinations
0.19%
16.2
Bacillus cereus
RISB1701
Phlebotomus papatasi
Order: Diptera
None
1.19%
16.2
Escherichia coli
RISB1769
Calliphoridae
Order: Diptera
None
0.53%
15.5
Pseudomonas sp. CIP-10
RISB1622
Dendroctonus valens
Order: Coleoptera
volatiles from predominant bacteria regulate the consumption sequence of carbon sources d-pinitol and d-glucose in the fungal symbiont Leptographium procerum, and appear to alleviate the antagonistic effect from the fungus against RTB larvae
5.70%
15.5
Buchnera aphidicola
RISB0051
Episyrphus balteatus
Order: Diptera
None
0.49%
15.5
Klebsiella
RISB0130
Ceratitis capitata
Order: Diptera
The intestinal microbiota structure was significantly influenced by the probiotic treatment while still maintaining a stable core dominant community of Enterobacteriacea. The  colony with these microbiome had the most improved potential functions in terms of gut microbes as well as the carbohydrates active enzymes most improved potential functions.
0.32%
15.3
Acetobacter
RISB1865
Drosophila melanogaster
Order: Diptera
The bacterial cells may thus be able to ameliorate the pH of the acidic region, by the release of weak bases.Additionally, the bacteria have a complex relationship with physiological processes which may affect ionic homeostasis in the gut, such as nutrition and immune function
0.27%
15.3
Lactiplantibacillus plantarum
RISB0608
Drosophila melanogaster
Order: Diptera
None
0.19%
15.2
Methylobacterium
RISB1440
Lutzomyia evansi
Order: Diptera
Methylobacterium can be important in several physiological and metabolic processes in Lu. evansi, which suggests that interactions could occur with Leishmania parasite
1.13%
14.5
Actinomyces
RISB1234
Hermetia illucens
Order: Diptera
provides the tools for degrading of a broad range of substrates
2.95%
14.2
Klebsiella
RISB1052
Bactrocera dorsalis
Order: Diptera
K. michiganensis BD177 has the strain-specific ability to provide three essential amino acids (phenylalanine, tryptophan and methionine) and two vitamins B (folate and riboflavin) to B. dorsalis
0.32%
14.2
Pseudomonas sp. CIP-10
RISB2224
Leptinotarsa decemlineata
Order: Coleoptera
Colorado potato beetle (Leptinotarsa decemlineata) larvae exploit bacteria in their oral secretions to suppress antiherbivore defenses in tomato (Solanum lycopersicum)
5.70%
14.0
Acetobacter
RISB0961
Drosophila melanogaster
Order: Diptera
The exist of Acetobacter had a balancing effect on food ingestion when carbohydrate levels were high in the warmer months, stabilizing fitness components of flies across the year.
0.27%
13.9
Sphingobacterium
RISB1226
Delia antiqua
Order: Diptera
six bacteria protect larvae from infection with the entomopathogen Beauveria bassiana through symbiotic bacterium-derived organic acids
1.08%
13.8
Acinetobacter
RISB0768
Delia antiqua
Order: Diptera
showed significant volatile inhibition activity against fungal entomopathogen Fusarium moniliforme, Botryosphaeria dothidea and both Fusarium oxysporum respectively
0.46%
13.7
Pseudomonas sp. URMO17WK12:I11
RISB1622
Dendroctonus valens
Order: Coleoptera
volatiles from predominant bacteria regulate the consumption sequence of carbon sources d-pinitol and d-glucose in the fungal symbiont Leptographium procerum, and appear to alleviate the antagonistic effect from the fungus against RTB larvae
3.75%
13.6
Paenibacillus
RISB0774
Delia antiqua
Order: Diptera
showed significant contact inhibition activity against fungal entomopathogen Fusarium moniliforme, Botryosphaeria dothidea and both Fusarium oxysporum respectively
0.31%
13.6
Klebsiella
RISB1139
Musca domestica
Order: Diptera
It is associated to newly laid housefly eggs, where it is deposited by the female, and has a role in oviposition as well as protection against potential pathogens
0.32%
13.6
Acinetobacter
RISB0421
Anopheles sinensis
Order: Diptera
Acinetobacter species increase the resistance of An. gambiae to Plasmodium development partly by the induction of anti-Plasmodium factors in Imd pathway
0.46%
13.5
Proteus
RISB2315
Aedes aegypti
Order: Diptera
upregulates AMP gene expression, resulting in suppression of DENV infection in the mosquito gut epithelium
0.46%
12.6
Acetobacter
RISB0184
Drosophila melanogaster
Order: Diptera
enhancing the brain levels of tyrosine decarboxylase 2 (Tdc2), which is an enzyme that synthesizes octopamine (OA)
0.27%
12.6
Sphingobacterium
RISB1400
Delia antiqua
Order: Diptera
suppressed Beauveria bassiana conidia germination and hyphal growth
1.08%
12.4
Bacillus cereus
RISB2161
Termitidae
Order: Blattodea
The ability of these arthropods to feed on wood, foliage and detritus is likely to involve catalysis by different types of cellulases/hemicellulases that are secreted by gut microbiota to digest the structural and recalcitrant lignocellulosic residues in their foods.
1.19%
11.2
Rickettsia
RISB1273
Culicoides impunctatus
Order: Diptera
possible symbiont-virus interactions
0.40%
11.1
Acinetobacter
RISB2083
Aedes aegypti
Order: Diptera
axenic larvae cannot develop
0.46%
11.0
Paenibacillus
RISB2098
Aedes aegypti
Order: Diptera
axenic larvae cannot develop
0.31%
10.9
Streptomyces sp. T12
RISB0943
Polybia plebeja
Order: Hymenoptera
this bacterium produces antimicrobial compounds that are active against Hirsutella citriformis, a natural fungal enemy of its host, and the human pathogens Staphylococcus aureus and Candida albicans
1.77%
10.7
Variovorax
RISB1712
Phlebotomus papatasi
Order: Diptera
None
0.53%
10.5
Buchnera aphidicola
RISB0236
Acyrthosiphon pisum
Order: Hemiptera
Buchnera the nutritional endosymbiont of A. pisum is located inside of bacteriocytes and requires aspartate from the aphid host, because it cannot make it de novo. Further Buchnera needs aspartate for the biosynthesis of the essential amino acids lysine and threonine, which the aphid and Buchnera require for survival
0.49%
10.5
Streptomyces sp. T12
RISB2334
Sirex noctilio
Order: Hymenoptera
degrading woody substrates and that such degradation may assist in nutrient acquisition by S. noctilio, thus contributing to its ability to be established in forested habitats worldwide
1.77%
10.5
Proteus
RISB0054
Episyrphus balteatus
Order: Diptera
None
0.46%
10.5
Rickettsia
RISB0588
Culicoides impunctatus
Order: Diptera
None
0.40%
10.4
Buchnera aphidicola
RISB2485
Macrosiphum euphorbiae
Order: Hemiptera
symbiont expression patterns differ between aphid clones with differing levels of virulence, and are influenced by the aphids' host plant. Potentially, symbionts may contribute to differential adaptation of aphids to host plant resistance
0.49%
10.3
Streptomyces sp. WAC00303
RISB0943
Polybia plebeja
Order: Hymenoptera
this bacterium produces antimicrobial compounds that are active against Hirsutella citriformis, a natural fungal enemy of its host, and the human pathogens Staphylococcus aureus and Candida albicans
0.91%
9.9
Escherichia coli
RISB1339
Manduca sexta
Order: Lepidoptera
modulate immunity-related gene expression in the infected F0 larvae, and also in their offspring, triggered immune responses in the infected host associated with shifts in both DNA methylation and histone acetylation
0.53%
9.9
Mammaliicoccus sciuri
RISB0075
Bombyx mori
Order: Lepidoptera
could produce a secreted chitinolytic lysozyme (termed Msp1) to damage fungal cell walls,completely inhibit the spore germination of fungal entomopathogens Metarhizium robertsii and Beauveria bassiana
0.44%
9.4
Blattabacterium cuenoti
RISB0133
Panesthiinae
Order: Blattodea
enables hosts to subsist on a nutrient-poor diet; endosymbiont genome erosions are associated with repeated host transitions to an underground life
0.49%
8.4
Escherichia coli
RISB0128
Tribolium castaneum
Order: Coleoptera
may produce 4,8-dimethyldecanal (DMD) production that is strongly associated with attraction to females and host pheromone communication
0.53%
8.3
Staphylococcus epidermidis
RISB1070
Oryctes rhinoceros
Order: Coleoptera
gut microbe
1.44%
6.7
Clostridium
RISB2301
Pyrrhocoris apterus
Order: Hemiptera
could play an important role for the insect by degrading complex dietary components, providing nutrient supplementation, or detoxifying noxious chemicals (e.g. cyclopropenoic fatty acids or gossypol) in the diet
2.27%
6.5
Burkholderia
RISB1172
Lagria villosa
Order: Coleoptera
process a cryptic gene cluster that codes for the biosynthesis of a novel antifungal polyketide with a glutarimide pharmacophore, which led to the discovery of the gladiofungins as previously-overlooked components of the antimicrobial armory of the beetle symbiont
1.37%
6.4
Blattabacterium cuenoti
RISB0518
Cryptocercus punctulatus
Order: Blattodea
collaborative arginine biosynthesis
0.49%
6.2
Blattabacterium cuenoti
RISB0093
Blattella germanica
Order: Blattodea
obligate endosymbiont
0.49%
5.9
Burkholderia
RISB1729
Lagria hirta
Order: Coleoptera
the symbionts inhibit the growth of antagonistic fungi on the eggs of the insect host, indicating that the Lagria-associated Burkholderia have evolved from plant pathogenic ancestors into insect defensive mutualists
1.37%
5.7
Burkholderia
RISB0402
Riptortus pedestris
Order: Hemiptera
symbiont colonization induces the development of the midgut crypts via finely regulating the enterocyte cell cycles, enabling it to stably and abundantly colonize the generated spacious crypts of the bean bug host
1.37%
5.6
Rickettsia
RISB0940
Bemisia tabaci
Order: Hemiptera
Rickettsia can be transmitted into plants via whitefly feeding and remain alive within the cotton plants for at least 2 weeks.Then the persistence of Rickettsia and its induced defense responses in cotton plants can increase the fitness of whitefly and, by this, Rickettsia may increase its infection and spread within its whitefly host
0.40%
5.4
Paenibacillus
RISB2195
Termitidae
Order: Blattodea
The ability of these arthropods to feed on wood, foliage and detritus is likely to involve catalysis by different types of cellulases/hemicellulases that are secreted by gut microbiota to digest the structural and recalcitrant lignocellulosic residues in their foods.
0.31%
5.3
Pantoea vagans
RISB1842
Macrotermes natalensis
Order: Blattodea
None
0.28%
5.3
Candidatus Erwinia haradaeae
RISB1632
Lachninae
Order: Hemiptera
None
0.15%
5.2
Xanthomonas
RISB0498
Xylocopa appendiculata
Order: Hymenoptera
Xanthomonas strain from Japanese carpenter bee is effective PU-degradable bacterium and is able to use polyacryl-based PU as a nutritional source, as well as other types of PS-PU and PE-PU
0.84%
4.6
Sphingobacterium
RISB2227
Leptinotarsa decemlineata
Order: Coleoptera
Colorado potato beetle (Leptinotarsa decemlineata) larvae exploit bacteria in their oral secretions to suppress antiherbivore defenses in tomato (Solanum lycopersicum)
1.08%
4.4
Bartonella
RISB1673
Apis mellifera
Order: Hymenoptera
a gut symbiont of insects and that the adaptation to blood-feeding insects facilitated colonization of the mammalian bloodstream
0.86%
3.4
Clostridium
RISB0028
Sesamia inferens
Order: Lepidoptera
degrade Chlorpyrifos and Chlorantraniliprole in vitro
2.27%
3.3
Proteus
RISB0001
Leptinotarsa decemlineata
Order: Coleoptera
produces toxic hydrogen cyanide (HCN) and a mandelonitrile-producing cyanoglucoside, amygdalin, which protect the insect from predation
0.46%
3.2
Xanthomonas
RISB0217
Xylocopa appendiculata
Order: Hymenoptera
strains biodegraded polyethylene terephthalate PET powder, broke it into its degradation products
0.84%
2.8
Nocardia
RISB0947
Acromyrmex
Order: Hymenoptera
Pseudonocardia in the Acromyrmex leaf-cutter ants as a protective partner against the entomopathogenic fungus Metarhizium
0.24%
2.7
Streptococcus
RISB2625
Galleria mellonella
Order: Lepidoptera
suppress bacteria ingested with food by producing bacteriocin and by releasing a lysozyme like enzyme
0.59%
2.6
Bacteroides
RISB0256
Leptocybe invasa
Order: Hymenoptera
Differences in Male-Killing Rickettsia Bacteria between Lineages of the Invasive Gall-Causing Pest Leptocybe invasa
0.30%
2.6
Bacteroides
RISB0090
Hyphantria cunea
Order: Lepidoptera
enhance the compatibility of invasive pests to new hosts and enable more rapid adaptation to new habitats.
0.30%
2.4
Bacteroides
RISB1183
Oryzaephilus surinamensis
Order: Coleoptera
supplement precursors for the cuticle synthesis and thereby enhance desiccation resistance of its host
0.30%
2.3
Nocardia
RISB1218
Mycocepurus smithii
Order: Hymenoptera
produce secondary metabolites with antibiotic activity that protects the fungus garden against pathogens
0.24%
2.3
Clostridium
RISB1959
Pyrrhocoridae
Order: Hemiptera
None
2.27%
2.3
Streptococcus
RISB2624
Reticulitermes flavipes
Order: Blattodea
can be broken down into substances such as carbon dioxide, ammonia and acetic acid
0.59%
2.2
Corynebacterium
RISB0363
Pagiophloeus tsushimanus
Order: Coleoptera
terpenoid-degrading: the highest degradation rates of D-camphor, linalool, and eucalyptol
0.24%
2.0
Halomonas
RISB1808
Monochamus galloprovincialis
Order: Coleoptera
Have the ability for degradation of cellulose, proteins and starch
0.68%
2.0
Corynebacterium
RISB0531
Helicoverpa armigera
Order: Lepidoptera
Corynebacterium sp. 2-TD, mediates the toxicity of the 2-tridecanone to H. armigera
0.24%
1.9
Methylobacterium
RISB2053
Atractomorpha sinensis
Order: Orthoptera
associated with cellulolytic enzymes
1.13%
1.9
Variovorax
RISB2153
Osmia bicornis
Order: Hymenoptera
may be essential to support Osmia larvae in their nutrient uptake
0.53%
1.8
Streptococcus
RISB2604
Homona magnanima
Order: Lepidoptera
influence the growth of Bacillus thuringiensis in the larvae
0.59%
1.8
Vibrio
RISB1810
Monochamus galloprovincialis
Order: Coleoptera
Have the ability for degradation of cellulose, proteins and starch
0.44%
1.8
Methylobacterium
RISB2340
Saturniidae
Order: Lepidoptera
Nitrogen fixation
1.13%
1.5
Corynebacterium
RISB2360
Bombyx mori
Order: Lepidoptera
producing lipase in a gut environment
0.24%
1.0
Halomonas
RISB1374
Bemisia tabaci
Order: Hemiptera
None
0.68%
0.7
Priestia
RISB0839
Helicoverpa armigera
Order: Lepidoptera
producing amylase
0.20%
0.5
Cupriavidus
RISB0694
Alydus tomentosus
Order: Hemiptera
None
0.21%
0.2
Helicobacter
RISB0662
Melanaphis bambusae
Order: Hemiptera
None
0.16%
0.2

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Species abundance estimation

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Assembly & Gene Prediction

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GFF format annotation

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Genome Binning

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Bin Information

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Raw Sequencing Files

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SRR19543161
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