Most plant sap-feeding hemipteran insects feed on diets with an extremely low or unbalanced nutrient content. Therefore, many plant sap-sucking insects (such as psyllids, whiteflies, mealybugs, aphids, cicadas, spittlebugs, and sharpshooters) rely on obligatory endosymbionts with much-reduced genome size to synthesize B vitamins, steroids, EAAs, and other nutrients
[20][21][22][23][51,68,69,70]. The application of NWR strategy in hemipteran insects has been verified in shield bugs, brown planthoppers, cochineal insects, aphids, and others.
Erwinia-like bacteria, vertically transmitted through eggs, are widely present in the midgut of stink bugs and they synthesize uricase, allantoinase, and allantoicase in the cecum of
Parastrachia japonensis to catalyze the degradation of uric acid. Uric acid is recycled for EAAs syntheses with the aid of
Erwinia-like bacteria, thereby leading to significant improvement of the survival rate of adults and nymphs
[24][18]. Different from
P. japonensis,
Nilaparvata lugens on its own is capable of encoding partial uricolytic genes (e.g., uricase gene). Under the synergistic action of
N. lugens and yeast-like symbionts in the fat body, uric acid is finally degraded and reutilized by insect-yeast association
[25][26][71,72]. The genome of endosymbiont
Dactylopiibacterium mainly located in the ovaries of the carmine cochineal insects (
D. coccus,
D. opuntiae) was sequenced, and the data showed that purine and uric acid degrading genes were present in its genome
[2][56]. In addition, fungal species (
Rhodotorula,
Cryptococcus,
Trametes,
Penicillium,
Debaryomyces) associated with the carmine cochineal also exhibit urate oxidase activity in uric acid metabolism
[27][73].
Acyrthosiphon pisum synergizes with the intracellular bacterium
Buchnera through the host cell-mediated mode to assimilate ammonia from bacteriocyte metabolism into EAAs
[6][28][15,74].