Department of Animal Sciences and Division of Nutritional Sciences, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, Illinois 61801.
Integr Comp Biol. 2002 Apr;42(2):319-26. doi: 10.1093/icb/42.2.319.
All animals, including humans, are adapted to life in a microbial world. Anaerobic habitats have existed continuously throughout the history of the earth, the gastrointestinal tract being a contemporary microniche. Since microorganisms colonize and grow rapidly under the favorable conditions in the gut they could compete for nutrients with the host. This microbial challenge has modified the course of evolution in animals, resulting in selection of complex animal-microbe relationships that vary tremendously, ranging from competition to cooperation. The ecological and evolutionary interactions between herbivorous dinosaurs and the first mammalian herbivores and their food plants are reconstructed using knowledge gained during the study of modern living vertebrates, especially foregut and hindgut fermenting mammals. The ruminant is well adapted to achieve maximal digestion of roughage using the physiological mechanism at the reticulo-omasal orifice which selectively retains large particles in the reticulo-rumen. However, the most obvious feature of all ruminants is the regurgitation, rechewing and reswallowing of foregut digesta termed rumination. Foregut fermenting mammals also share interesting and unique features in two enzymes, stomach lysozyme and pancreatic ribonuclease which accompany and are adaptations to this mode of digestion. The microbial community inhabiting the gastrointestinal tract is represented by all major groups of microbes (bacteria, archaea, ciliate protozoa, anaerobic fungi and bacteriophage) and characterized by its high population density, wide diversity and complexity of interactions. The development and application of molecular ecology techniques promises to link distribution and identity of gastrointestinal microbes in their natural environment with their genetic potential and in situ activities.
所有动物,包括人类,都适应了生活在微生物世界中。无氧栖息地在地球历史上一直持续存在,胃肠道是当代的微生物小生境。由于微生物在肠道中有利的条件下迅速定殖和生长,它们可能与宿主争夺营养。这种微生物的挑战改变了动物的进化过程,导致了动物与微生物之间复杂关系的选择,这些关系差异极大,从竞争到合作。使用在研究现代活体脊椎动物(特别是前肠和后肠发酵哺乳动物)过程中获得的知识,重建了草食性恐龙与第一批哺乳动物草食动物及其食物植物之间的生态和进化相互作用。反刍动物很好地适应了利用网胃 - 瓣胃孔的生理机制来最大限度地消化粗饲料,该机制选择性地将大颗粒保留在网胃 - 瘤胃中。然而,所有反刍动物最明显的特征是反刍,重新咀嚼和重新吞咽前肠消化物,称为反刍。前肠发酵哺乳动物在两种酶(胃溶菌酶和胰腺核糖核酸酶)中也具有有趣且独特的特征,这些酶伴随着并适应这种消化方式。栖息在胃肠道中的微生物群落由所有主要的微生物群体(细菌、古菌、纤毛虫原生动物、厌氧真菌和噬菌体)代表,并以其高种群密度、广泛的多样性和复杂的相互作用为特征。分子生态学技术的发展和应用有望将胃肠道微生物在其自然环境中的分布和身份与其遗传潜力和原位活性联系起来。