SRR24994210 - Ceratosolen

Basic Information

Run: SRR24994210

Assay Type: WGS

Bioproject: PRJNA986526

Biosample: SAMN35841275

Bytes: 56563946

Center Name: NMRC_BDRD_BFX

Sequencing Information

Instrument: Illumina MiSeq

Library Layout: PAIRED

Library Selection: cDNA

Platform: ILLUMINA

Quality Control Information

Filter Percentage: -

QC Average Length: -

Retained Reads: -

Geographic Information

Country: Uganda

Continent: Africa

Location Name: Uganda

Latitude/Longitude: 0.228056 N 30.505292 E

Sample Information

Host: Ceratosolen

Isolation: synconia of Ficus trees

Biosample Model: Metagenome or environmental

Collection Date: 2016-01

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
Pseudomonas sp. CIP-10
RISB1564
Liometopum apiculatum
Order: Hymenoptera
None
24.13%
39.1
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
24.13%
34.0
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)
24.13%
32.5
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.
19.22%
29.2
Bacillus cereus
RISB2489
Anticarsia gemmatalis
Order: Lepidoptera
allow the adaptation of this insect to plants rich in protease inhibitors, minimizing the potentially harmful consequences of protease inhibitors from some of this insect host plants, such as soybean
19.22%
28.2
Bacillus cereus
RISB2237
Anticarsia gemmatalis
Order: Lepidoptera
mitigation of the negative effects of proteinase inhibitors produced by the host plant
19.22%
25.9
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
6.02%
25.0
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
6.02%
24.7
Streptomyces sp. T12
RISB1134
mud dauber wasp
Order: Hymenoptera
secondary metabolites derived from a Streptomyces sp. displayed significant inhibitory activity against hexokinase II
6.02%
23.4
Stenotrophomonas maltophilia
RISB2004
Trichogramma chilonis
Order: Hymenoptera
could significantly increase both female count
4.23%
20.2
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
0.30%
14.1
Stenotrophomonas maltophilia
RISB1122
Bombyx mori
Order: Lepidoptera
facilitate host resistance against organophosphate insecticides, provides essential amino acids that increase host fitness and allow the larvae to better tolerate the toxic effects of the insecticide.
4.23%
13.2
Xanthomonas
RISB0217
Xylocopa appendiculata
Order: Hymenoptera
strains biodegraded polyethylene terephthalate PET powder, broke it into its degradation products
0.30%
12.2
Stenotrophomonas maltophilia
RISB1227
Delia antiqua
Order: Diptera
six bacteria protect larvae from infection with the entomopathogen Beauveria bassiana through symbiotic bacterium-derived organic acids
4.23%
11.9
Acinetobacter
RISB2000
Trichogramma chilonis
Order: Hymenoptera
could significantly increase both female count
0.54%
11.5
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
1.10%
11.1
Klebsiella pneumoniae
RISB2185
Scirpophaga incertulas
Order: Lepidoptera
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.
0.89%
10.9
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
1.10%
10.3
Pantoea sp. At-9b
RISB0118
Nezara viridula
Order: Hemiptera
plays an important role in interactions between insects and plants and could therefore be considered a valuable target for the development of sustainable pest control strategies;transmitted bacteria impacted plant chemical defenses and were able to degrade toxic plant metabolites, aiding the shield bug in its nutrition
0.25%
10.3
Gibbsiella
RISB1320
Vespa mandarinia
Order: Hymenoptera
None
0.14%
10.1
Klebsiella oxytoca
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.
0.08%
10.1
Vibrio
RISB1810
Monochamus galloprovincialis
Order: Coleoptera
Have the ability for degradation of cellulose, proteins and starch
8.31%
9.6
Enterobacter sp. T2
RISB2221
Leptinotarsa decemlineata
Order: Coleoptera
Colorado potato beetle (Leptinotarsa decemlineata) larvae exploit bacteria in their oral secretions to suppress antiherbivore defenses in tomato (Solanum lycopersicum)
1.10%
9.4
Rhizobium
RISB0135
Coccinella septempunctata
Order: Coleoptera
be commonly found in plant roots and they all have nitrogen fixation abilities
7.69%
9.3
Klebsiella michiganensis
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
0.11%
9.0
Pantoea sp. At-9b
RISB0119
Nezara viridula
Order: Hemiptera
plays an important role in interactions between insects and plants and could therefore be considered a valuable target for the development of sustainable pest control strategies.
0.25%
8.8
Raoultella sp. HC6
RISB2226
Leptinotarsa decemlineata
Order: Coleoptera
Colorado potato beetle (Leptinotarsa decemlineata) larvae exploit bacteria in their oral secretions to suppress antiherbivore defenses in tomato (Solanum lycopersicum)
0.42%
8.8
Pantoea sp. At-9b
RISB1491
Nezara viridula
Order: Hemiptera
help stinkbugs to feed on soybean developing seeds in spite of its chemical defenses by degrading isoflavonoids and deactivate soybean protease inhibitors
0.25%
8.3
Kosakonia sp. MUSA4
RISB0810
Hypothenemus hampei
Order: Coleoptera
might contribute to caffeine breakdown using the C-16 oxidation pathway
0.15%
6.6
Kosakonia sp. BYX6
RISB0810
Hypothenemus hampei
Order: Coleoptera
might contribute to caffeine breakdown using the C-16 oxidation pathway
0.07%
6.5
Raoultella sp. HC6
RISB1575
Bactrocera tau
Order: Diptera
could attract male and female B. tau
0.42%
6.1
Acinetobacter
RISB0140
Nilaparvata lugens
Order: Hemiptera
Acinetobacter can effectively degrade cellulose and harmful substances such as polystyrene and phenol.It can help the short-winged BPH to improve its detoxification ability in harsh environments and adapt to environmental changes at any time.
0.54%
5.4
Acinetobacter
RISB0730
Curculio chinensis
Order: Coleoptera
Acinetobacter sp. in C. chinensis enriched after treating with saponin, and when incubating bacteria with saponin for 72 h, saponin content significantly decreased from 4.054 to 1.867 mg/mL (by 16S rRNA metagenome sequencing and HPLC)
0.54%
5.2
Halomonas
RISB1808
Monochamus galloprovincialis
Order: Coleoptera
Have the ability for degradation of cellulose, proteins and starch
0.16%
1.5
Halomonas
RISB1374
Bemisia tabaci
Order: Hemiptera
None
0.16%
0.2

Download Files

Taxonomic Analysis Files

Kraken Report

Detailed taxonomic classification

Download
Krona HTML

Interactive taxonomic visualization

Download
Bracken Results

Species abundance estimation

Download

Assembly & Gene Prediction

Assembled Contigs

MEGAHIT assembly results

Download
Predicted Genes

Gene sequences (FASTA)

Download
Gene Annotation

GFF format annotation

Download

Genome Binning

MetaBAT2 Bins

Compressed genome bins

Download
Bin Information

Quality metrics and statistics

Download

Raw Sequencing Files

Direct download from NCBI SRA
Run ID File Size
SRR24994210
53.9 MB Download

Raw sequencing files are hosted on NCBI SRA. Click the download button to start downloading directly from NCBI servers.

Back to Metagenomes List
Back to Table