Insect Freeze-Tolerance Downunder: The Microbial Connection

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Date

2023-01-13

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MDPI (Basel, Switzerland)

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(c) 2023 The Author/s
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Abstract

Insects that are freeze-tolerant start freezing at high sub-zero temperatures and produce small ice crystals. They do this using ice-nucleating agents that facilitate intercellular ice growth and prevent formation of large crystals where they can damage tissues. In Aotearoa/New Zealand the majority of cold adapted invertebrates studied survive freezing at any time of year, with ice formation beginning in the rich microbiome of the gut. Some freeze-tolerant insects are known to host symbiotic bacteria and/or fungi that produce ice-nucleating agents and we speculate that gut microbes of many New Zealand insects may provide ice-nucleating active compounds that moderate freezing. We consider too the possibility that evolutionary disparate freeze-tolerant insect species share gut microbes that are a source of ice-nucleating agents and so we describe potential transmission pathways of shared gut fauna. Despite more than 30 years of research into the freeze-tolerant mechanisms of Southern Hemisphere insects, the role of exogenous ice-nucleating agents has been neglected. Key traits of three New Zealand freeze-tolerant lineages are considered in light of the supercooling point (temperature of ice crystal formation) of microbial ice-nucleating particles, the initiation site of freezing, and the implications for invertebrate parasites. We outline approaches that could be used to investigate potential sources of ice-nucleating agents in freeze-tolerant insects and the tools employed to study insect microbiomes.

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Aotearoa, Celatoblatta, Hemideina, Sigaus, alpine insects, freeze tolerance, genomics, gut microbes, ice-nucleating agent, microbiome

Citation

Morgan-Richards M, Marshall CJ, Biggs PJ, Trewick SA. (2023). Insect Freeze-Tolerance Downunder: The Microbial Connection.. Insects. 14. 1. (pp. 89-).

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Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as (c) 2023 The Author/s