Krista Starr, Federica Montesanto, Esther Perisho, Nirosh Aluthge, Mark Pegg, Samodha C Fernando
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引用次数: 0
摘要
肠道微生物组是一个高度复杂的生态系统,对宿主的生理有着举足轻重的影响。鱼类微生物组的特征对于了解鱼类的生理和健康至关重要,但人们对栖息在鱼类物种中的微生物的生态学和定植动态知之甚少。在这项研究中,我们调查了从美国内布拉斯加州的河流中采集的两种小型鱼类的细菌群落,这两种鱼类是Cyprinella lutrensis(红胫鱼)和Notropis stramineus(沙胫鱼)。我们的研究重点是评估小体型鱼类的微生物多样性,并识别这些鱼类体内存在的自生微生物,无论其存在于何处,从而更好地了解细菌群落的组成以及这些细菌物种可能发挥的作用。我们的研究结果表明,红鳐和沙鳐的肠道细菌群落均以淡水鱼类中的典型细菌门为主。细菌门在这两种鱼类中的数量极少,与周围水域的微生物群落相比,相对丰度明显较低。此外,我们还发现红鲱鱼和沙鲱鱼的肠道微生物群落与周围水域的微生物群落不同,这表明这些鱼类物种含有与宿主相关的细菌物种,这些细菌物种可能会为宿主提供营养消化和抵抗环境病原体定植等益处。鱼类肠道细菌群落对浑浊度、溶解氧、温度和总氮等环境条件非常敏感。我们的研究结果还显示了不同鱼类之间细菌群落的差异;尽管它们的细菌类群在门级组成上有显著的相似性,但细菌类群的 ASV 级分析显示了组成上的差异。这些发现有助于更好地了解野生淡水小体型鱼类的肠道细菌组成,并强调了内在(宿主)和环境因素对细菌组成的影响。
Gut Microbial Composition of Cyprinella lutrensis (Red Shiner) and Notropis stramineus (Sand Shiner): Insights from Wild Fish Populations.
The gut microbiome is a highly intricate ecosystem that exerts a pivotal influence on the host's physiology. Characterizing fish microbiomes is critical to understanding fish physiology and health, but little is known about the ecology and colonization dynamics of microorganisms inhabiting fish species. In this study, we investigated the bacterial communities of two small-bodied fish species, Cyprinella lutrensis (red shiner) and Notropis stramineus (sand shiner), two fish species where gut microbiomes have not been investigated previously and surrounding waters, collected from rivers in Nebraska, USA. Our study focused on evaluating microbial diversity in small-bodied fish and identifying autochthonous microbes present within these species irrespective of location to better understand bacterial community composition and possible roles of such bacterial species. Our results revealed that both red shiner and sand shiner exhibited gut bacterial communities dominated by typical bacterial phyla found in freshwater fish. The phylum Bacteroidota was minimally abundant in both species and significantly lower in relative abundance compared to the surrounding water microbial community. Furthermore, we found that the gut microbiomes of red shiner and sand shiner differed from the microbial community in the surrounding water, suggesting that these fish species contain host-associated bacterial species that may provide benefits to the host such as nutrient digestion and colonization resistance of environmental pathogens. The fish gut bacterial communities were sensitive to environmental conditions such as turbidity, dissolved oxygen, temperature, and total nitrogen. Our findings also show bacterial community differences between fish species; although they shared notable similarities in bacterial taxa at phyla level composition, ASV level analysis of bacterial taxa displayed compositional differences. These findings contribute to a better understanding of the gut bacterial composition of wild, freshwater, small-bodied fish and highlight the influence of intrinsic (host) and environmental factors on shaping the bacterial composition.
期刊介绍:
The journal Microbial Ecology was founded more than 50 years ago by Dr. Ralph Mitchell, Gordon McKay Professor of Applied Biology at Harvard University in Cambridge, MA. The journal has evolved to become a premier location for the presentation of manuscripts that represent advances in the field of microbial ecology. The journal has become a dedicated international forum for the presentation of high-quality scientific investigations of how microorganisms interact with their environment, with each other and with their hosts. Microbial Ecology offers articles of original research in full paper and note formats, as well as brief reviews and topical position papers.