Seminar Series – 15 July

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SymbNET Online Seminar Series

Monthly seminars on host-microbe symbiosis, genomics, and metabolomics, with two talks from SymbNET researchers.

The seminars are open and free to all, but registration is required.

Please register once for the entire seminar series.

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SymbNET Seminar @ IGC Friday Seminar

 

15 July 2022 (Fr)

14:00 WEST // 15:00 CEST

Hybrid seminar @FCG-IGC and online

 

Speaker: Philipp Engel

Affiliation: Department of Fundamental Microbiology, University of Lausanne (UNIL), Switzerland

Title: Specialized gut microbiota-host interactions in social bees

Abstract: Social animals often harbor specialized microbial communities in their gut. Social interactions facilitate the transmission of gut symbionts from one generation to the next resulting in host-restricted microbial evolution, diversification, and adaptation to distinct ecological niches in the gut. However, the complex nature of gut microbial communities is a formidable challenge to study these eco-evolutionary processes. Moreover, whether gut symbionts can modulate the social behavior of the host, and thereby possibly influence their transmission, is currently unknown. Social bees offer fantastic opportunities to study such aspects of microbiota-host interactions. Honey bees, bumble bees, and stingless bees harbor relatively simple, yet specialized gut bacterial communities that are experimentally tractable. In my talk, I will present recent findings from genomics and experimental approaches showing how bee gut symbionts partition the available ecological niches in the honey bee gut. This includes examples of closely related species that have diversified by adapting to different dietary resources as well as bacteria that feed on host-derived nutrients. I will further present results from automated behavioral tracking of honey bee sub-colonies which revealed that the microbiota increases the rate and specialization of social interactions among hosts. These findings demonstrate that the gut microbiota can modulate emergent group-level behaviors of animals. Such microbiota effects on social behavior may reinforce the evolution of specialized microbiota-host interactions.

 

SymbNET Seminars