Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut 06511, USA;
Genome Res. 2013 Oct;23(10):1715-20. doi: 10.1101/gr.154773.113. Epub 2013 Jun 26.
The gut microbial communities within great apes have been shown to reflect the phylogenetic history of their hosts, indicating codiversification between great apes and their gut microbiota over evolutionary timescales. But because the great apes examined to date represent geographically isolated populations whose diets derive from different sources, it is unclear whether this pattern of codiversification has resulted from a long history of coadaptation between microbes and hosts (heritable factors) or from the ecological and geographic separation among host species (environmental factors). To evaluate the relative influences of heritable and environmental factors on the evolution of the great ape gut microbiota, we assayed the gut communities of sympatric and allopatric populations of chimpanzees, bonobos, and gorillas residing throughout equatorial Africa. Comparisons of these populations revealed that the gut communities of different host species can always be distinguished from one another but that the gut communities of sympatric chimpanzees and gorillas have converged in terms of community composition, sharing on average 53% more bacterial phylotypes than the gut communities of allopatric hosts. Host environment, independent of host genetics and evolutionary history, shaped the distribution of bacterial phylotypes across the Bacteroidetes, Firmicutes, Proteobacteria, and Actinobacteria, the four most common phyla of gut bacteria. Moreover, the specific patterns of phylotype sharing among hosts suggest that chimpanzees living in sympatry with gorillas have acquired bacteria from gorillas. These results indicate that geographic isolation between host species has promoted the evolutionary differentiation of great ape gut bacterial communities.
研究表明,大型猿类的肠道微生物群落反映了其宿主的系统发育历史,这表明在进化时间尺度上,大型猿类与其肠道微生物群之间存在共同进化。但是,由于迄今为止研究的大型猿类代表了地理隔离的种群,其饮食来源来自不同的来源,因此尚不清楚这种共同进化模式是由于微生物和宿主之间的长期共同适应(遗传因素)还是由于宿主物种之间的生态和地理分离(环境因素)造成的。为了评估遗传和环境因素对大型猿类肠道微生物群进化的相对影响,我们检测了生活在赤道非洲各地的共生和异地种群的黑猩猩、倭黑猩猩和大猩猩的肠道群落。对这些种群的比较表明,不同宿主物种的肠道群落总是可以彼此区分开,但是共生的黑猩猩和大猩猩的肠道群落在群落组成上已经趋同,平均共享的细菌型多于异地宿主的肠道群落的 53%。宿主环境,独立于宿主遗传和进化历史,影响了细菌型在拟杆菌门、厚壁菌门、变形菌门和放线菌门中的分布,这是肠道细菌的四个最常见门。此外,宿主之间的特定型共享模式表明,与大猩猩共生的黑猩猩已经从大猩猩那里获得了细菌。这些结果表明,宿主种间的地理隔离促进了大型猿类肠道细菌群落的进化分化。