Josephine Bay Paul Center, Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, MA, USA.
Marine Chemistry and Geochemistry Department, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Woods Hole, MA, USA.
ISME J. 2014 Jun;8(6):1198-209. doi: 10.1038/ismej.2013.227. Epub 2014 Jan 9.
Microbial communities have a key role in the physiology of the sponge host, and it is therefore essential to understand the stability and specificity of sponge-symbiont associations. Host-specific bacterial associations spanning large geographic distance are widely acknowledged in sponges. However, the full spectrum of specificity remains unclear. In particular, it is not known whether closely related sponges host similar or very different microbiota over wide bathymetric and geographic gradients, and whether specific associations extend to the rare members of the sponge microbiome. Using the ultra-deep Illumina sequencing technology, we conducted a comparison of sponge bacterial communities in seven closely related Hexadella species with a well-resolved host phylogeny, as well as of a distantly related sponge Mycale. These samples spanned unprecedentedly large bathymetric (15-960 m) gradients and varying European locations. In addition, this study included a bacterial community analysis of the local background seawater for both Mycale and the widespread deep-sea taxa Hexadella cf. dedritifera. We observed a striking diversity of microbes associated with the sponges, spanning 47 bacterial phyla. The data did not reveal any Hexadella microbiota co-speciation pattern, but confirmed sponge-specific and species-specific host-bacteria associations, even within extremely low abundant taxa. Oligotyping analysis also revealed differential enrichment preferences of closely related Nitrospira members in closely related sponges species. Overall, these results demonstrate highly diverse, remarkably specific and stable sponge-bacteria associations that extend to members of the rare biosphere at a very fine phylogenetic scale, over significant geographic and bathymetric gradients.
微生物群落对海绵宿主的生理学具有关键作用,因此理解海绵-共生体关联的稳定性和特异性至关重要。在海绵中,广泛承认宿主特异性的细菌关联跨越了大的地理距离。然而,特异性的全貌仍不清楚。特别是,尚不清楚密切相关的海绵在广泛的水深和地理梯度上是否宿主相似或非常不同的微生物群,以及特定的关联是否扩展到海绵微生物组的稀有成员。使用超深度 Illumina 测序技术,我们比较了七个具有良好解决的宿主系统发育的密切相关的 Hexadella 物种的海绵细菌群落,以及一个远缘海绵 Mycale。这些样本跨越了前所未有的大水深(15-960 米)梯度和不同的欧洲位置。此外,本研究还包括对 Mycale 和广泛分布的深海类群 Hexadella cf. dedritifera 的本地背景海水的细菌群落分析。我们观察到与海绵相关的微生物多样性惊人,涵盖了 47 个细菌门。数据没有显示出任何 Hexadella 微生物共生的模式,但证实了海绵特异性和物种特异性的宿主-细菌关联,即使在极低丰度的类群中也是如此。寡型分析还揭示了密切相关的 Nitrospira 成员在密切相关的海绵物种中具有不同的富集偏好。总体而言,这些结果表明,在非常精细的系统发育尺度上,跨越显著的地理和水深梯度,海绵-细菌关联具有高度多样化、显著特异性和稳定性,甚至延伸到稀有生物界的成员。