Yang Hong, Schmitt-Wagner Dirk, Stingl Ulrich, Brune Andreas
Fachbereich Biologie, Mikrobielle Okologie, Universität Konstanz, 78457 Konstanz, Germany.
Environ Microbiol. 2005 Jul;7(7):916-32. doi: 10.1111/j.1462-2920.2005.00760.x.
Differences in microenvironment and interactions of microorganisms within and across habitat boundaries should influence structure and diversity of the microbial communities within an ecosystem. We tested this hypothesis using the well characterized gut tract of the European subterranean termite Reticulitermes santonensis as a model. By cloning and sequencing analysis and molecular fingerprinting (terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism), we characterized the bacterial microbiota in the major intestinal habitats - the midgut, the wall of the hindgut paunch, the hindgut fluid and the intestinal protozoa. The bacterial community was very diverse (> 200 ribotypes) and comprised representatives of several phyla, including Firmicutes (mainly clostridia, streptococci and Mycoplasmatales-related clones), Bacteroidetes, Spirochaetes and a number of Proteobacteria, all of which were unevenly distributed among the four habitats. The largest group of clones fell into the so-called Termite group 1 (TG-1) phylum, which has no cultivated representatives. The majority of the TG-1 clones were associated with the protozoa and formed two phylogenetically distinct clusters, which consisted exclusively of clones previously retrieved from the gut of this and other Reticulitermes species. Also the other clones represented lineages of microorganisms that were exclusively recovered from the intestinal tract of termites. The termite specificity of these lineages was underscored by the finding that the closest relatives of the bacterial clones obtained from R. santonensis were usually derived also from the most closely related termites. Overall, differences in diversity between the different gut habitats and the uneven distribution of individual phylotypes support conclusively that niche heterogeneity is a strong determinant of the structure and spatial organization of the microbial community in the termite gut.
微环境差异以及微生物在栖息地边界内外的相互作用,应该会影响生态系统内微生物群落的结构和多样性。我们以欧洲地下白蚁黄胸散白蚁(Reticulitermes santonensis)特征明确的肠道为模型来验证这一假说。通过克隆测序分析和分子指纹技术(末端限制性片段长度多态性分析),我们对主要肠道栖息地——中肠、后肠嗉囊壁、后肠液和肠道原生动物中的细菌微生物群进行了特征分析。细菌群落非常多样(>200个核糖型),包含几个门的代表,包括厚壁菌门(主要是梭菌、链球菌和支原体相关克隆)、拟杆菌门、螺旋体门和一些变形菌门,所有这些在四个栖息地中的分布并不均匀。最大的克隆群属于所谓的白蚁群1(TG-1)门,该门没有可培养的代表。大多数TG-1克隆与原生动物相关,并形成了两个系统发育上不同的簇,这些簇完全由先前从该种和其他散白蚁属物种的肠道中获得的克隆组成。其他克隆也代表了仅从白蚁肠道中分离出的微生物谱系。从黄胸散白蚁获得的细菌克隆的最亲近亲属通常也来自关系最密切的白蚁,这一发现突出了这些谱系的白蚁特异性。总体而言,不同肠道栖息地之间的多样性差异以及各个系统发育型的不均匀分布,确凿地支持了生态位异质性是白蚁肠道中微生物群落结构和空间组织的一个重要决定因素。