Symbiotic interactions, central to most life on Earth, are interwoven associations that vary in intimacy and duration. Some of the most well-known examples of symbioses occur between animals and gut bacteria. These associations lead to physiological integration of host and symbionts. The diversity of microbes within animal hosts can make studying them technically challenging. Thus, most science heavily focuses on the animal side of symbioses, limiting study of the microbial symbionts to characterization of their genetic and functional diversity. These limitations are minimized in Heteropteran insects that have specialized midguts that separately house single symbiont species away from ingested food. These insect–bacteria associations allow us to address fundamental questions regarding how both hosts and symbionts change to establish a cooperative relationship. In this study, through ex vivo and in vivo observations of cellular behaviors, we explore concurrent structural and cellular dynamics in both the squash bug host (Anasa tristis) and its Caballeronia zhejiangensis symbionts during the initiation of symbiosis. We elucidate how C. zhejiangensis is sequestered within a specialized symbiotic organ within the A. tristis midgut, how the symbiont uses active motility to reach the symbiotic organ, how symbionts colonize host crypts within the organ and how host crypt morphogenesis progresses during the initiation of symbiotic interactions. Our findings provide insight into how dynamic cellular activity and morphological development reciprocally change in both host and symbiont as they establish symbiotic interactions.

Author contributions

Conceptualization: A.D.J., J.Z.C., N.M.G.; Data curation: A.D.J., J.Z.C., J.G.D.; Formal analysis: A.D.J., J.Z.C., J.G.D.; Funding acquisition: A.D.J., N.M.G.; Investigation: A.D.J., J.Z.C., J.G.D., N.M.G.; Methodology: A.D.J., J.Z.C., J.G.D., N.M.G.; Project administration: A.D.J., N.M.G.; Resources: A.D.J., J.Z.C., N.M.G.; Software: J.G.D.; Supervision: A.D.J., N.M.G.; Validation: A.D.J., J.Z.C., J.G.D., N.M.G.; Visualization: A.D.J., J.Z.C., J.G.D.; Writing – original draft: A.D.J.; Writing – review & editing: A.D.J., J.Z.C., J.G.D., N.M.G.

Funding

This research was supported by the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA) (2023-67012-40012 and 2019-67013-29371) and by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS) (GM000680). Deposited in PMC for release after 12 months.

Data availability

All images and bacterial strains are available upon request. Actin and symbiont distribution pipeline and analysis code is available at https://github.com/gabe-dubose/crypt_morphology.

Special Issue

This article is part of the special issue ‘Integrative Biology of the Gut’, guest edited by Carol Bucking, Matt Regan and John Terblanche. See related articles at https://journals.biologists.com/jeb/issue/228/14.

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