medaka (Oryzias latipes)肠道微生物组的种内变异是由光照强度和遗传背景的相互作用驱动的

Charlotte Evangelista, Stefaniya Kamenova, Beatriz Diaz Pauli, Joakim Sandkjenn, Leif Asbjørn Vøllestad, Eric Edeline, Pål Trosvik, Eric Jacques de Muinck
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摘要

考虑到人类对物种生态和进化轨迹的前所未有的破坏,揭示肠道微生物组的环境进化相互作用尤为重要。在这里,我们旨在评估大小选择性死亡的进化反应是否会影响medaka (Oryzias latipes)的肠道微生物群,环境条件如何与medaka的遗传背景相互作用,以及微生物群多样性与medaka生长相关性状之间的关系。为了做到这一点,我们研究了两个已知在觅食效率和生活史上存在差异的medaka谱系,这些谱系在拮抗大小选择制度下饲养了10代(即去除最大或最小的繁殖者以模拟类似捕鱼或自然死亡)。在池塘中生态系统中,两个世系的种群密度和光照强度(作为资源可用性的指标)进行了对比。我们观察到两个品系之间肠道微生物组成和丰富度存在显著差异,这种影响是由光照强度介导的。与强光条件相比,弱光条件下类鱼medaka(小型繁殖品系)的细菌丰富度降低了34%,而在自然死亡率选择的medaka(大型繁殖品系)中则保持不变。然而,观察到的细菌丰富度的变化与成人生长相关性状的变化无关。鉴于越来越多的证据表明肠道微生物组对宿主健康的重要性,需要更深入的研究来充分了解微生物组在大小选择生物体中的作用以及可能的生态系统水平后果。
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Within-species variation in the gut microbiome of medaka (Oryzias latipes) is driven by the interaction of light intensity and genetic background
Unravelling evolution-by-environment interactions on the gut microbiome is particularly relevant considering the unprecedented level of human-driven disruption of the ecological and evolutionary trajectories of species. Here, we aimed to evaluate whether an evolutionary response to size-selective mortality influences the gut microbiome of medaka (Oryzias latipes), how environmental conditions interact with the genetic background of medaka on their microbiota, and the association between microbiome diversity and medaka growth-related traits. To do so, we studied two lineages of medaka with known divergence in foraging efficiency and life history raised under antagonistic size-selective regimes for 10 generations (i.e. the largest or the smallest breeders were removed to mimic fishing-like or natural mortality). In pond mesocosms, the two lineages were subjected to contrasting population density and light intensity (used as proxies of resource availability). We observed significant differences in the gut microbiome composition and richness between the two lines, and this effect was mediated by light intensity. The bacterial richness of fishing-like medaka (small-breeder line) was reduced by 34% under low-light conditions compared to high-light conditions, while it remained unchanged in natural mortality-selected medaka (large-breeder line). However, the observed changes in bacterial richness did not correlate with changes in adult growth-related traits. Given the growing evidence about the gut microbiomes importance to host health, more in-depth studies are required to fully understand the role of the microbiome in size-selected organisms and the possible ecosystem-level consequences.
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