Department of Animal Sciences, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL 61801, USA.
ISME J. 2011 Sep;5(9):1461-70. doi: 10.1038/ismej.2011.33. Epub 2011 Mar 31.
Herbivorous reptiles depend on complex gut microbial communities to effectively degrade dietary polysaccharides. The composition of these fermentative communities may vary based on dietary differences. To explore the role of diet in shaping gut microbial communities, we evaluated the fecal samples from two related host species--the algae-consuming marine iguana (Amblyrhynchus cristatus) and land iguanas (LI) (genus Conolophus) that consume terrestrial vegetation. Marine and LI fecal samples were collected from different islands in the Galápagos archipelago. High-throughput 16S rRNA-based pyrosequencing was used to provide a comparative analysis of fecal microbial diversity. At the phylum level, the fecal microbial community in iguanas was predominated by Firmicutes (69.5±7.9%) and Bacteroidetes (6.2±2.8%), as well as unclassified Bacteria (20.6±8.6%), suggesting that a large portion of iguana fecal microbiota is novel and could be involved in currently unknown functions. Host species differed in the abundance of specific bacterial groups. Bacteroides spp., Lachnospiraceae and Clostridiaceae were significantly more abundant in the marine iguanas (MI) (P-value>1E-9). In contrast, Ruminococcaceae were present at >5-fold higher abundance in the LI than MI (P-value>6E-14). Archaea were only detected in the LI. The number of operational taxonomic units (OTUs) in the LI (356-896 OTUs) was >2-fold higher than in the MI (112-567 OTUs), and this increase in OTU diversity could be related to the complexity of the resident bacterial population and their gene repertoire required to breakdown the recalcitrant polysaccharides prevalent in terrestrial plants. Our findings suggest that dietary differences contribute to gut microbial community differentiation in herbivorous lizards. Most importantly, this study provides a better understanding of the microbial diversity in the iguana gut; therefore facilitating future efforts to discover novel bacterial-associated enzymes that can effectively breakdown a wide variety of complex polysaccharides.
草食性爬行动物依赖于复杂的肠道微生物群落来有效降解膳食中的多糖。这些发酵群落的组成可能因饮食差异而有所不同。为了探索饮食在塑造肠道微生物群落中的作用,我们评估了来自两个相关宿主物种——食用藻类的加拉帕戈斯海鬣蜥(Amblyrhynchus cristatus)和食用陆地植被的地鬣蜥(Conolophus)的粪便样本。从加拉帕戈斯群岛的不同岛屿收集了海洋鬣蜥和地鬣蜥的粪便样本。高通量 16S rRNA 焦磷酸测序用于提供粪便微生物多样性的比较分析。在门水平上,鬣蜥的粪便微生物群落主要由厚壁菌门(Firmicutes)(69.5±7.9%)和拟杆菌门(Bacteroidetes)(6.2±2.8%)以及未分类的细菌(20.6±8.6%)组成,这表明鬣蜥粪便微生物群的很大一部分是新颖的,可能涉及目前未知的功能。宿主物种在特定细菌群的丰度上存在差异。Bacteroides spp.、Lachnospiraceae 和 Clostridiaceae 在海洋鬣蜥(MI)中显著更为丰富(P 值>1E-9)。相比之下,Ruminococcaceae 在 LI 中的丰度比 MI 高 5 倍以上(P 值>6E-14)。古菌仅在 LI 中检测到。LI 中的操作分类单元(OTU)数量(356-896 OTU)是 MI 的两倍多(112-567 OTU),这种 OTU 多样性的增加可能与驻留细菌种群的复杂性及其分解陆地植物中常见的抗性多糖所需的基因库有关。我们的研究结果表明,饮食差异导致草食性蜥蜴的肠道微生物群落分化。最重要的是,这项研究提供了对鬣蜥肠道微生物多样性的更好理解;因此,有助于未来努力发现能够有效分解各种复杂多糖的新型细菌相关酶。