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座头鲸种群共享一个核心皮肤细菌群落:能否建立海洋哺乳动物的健康指数?

Humpback whale populations share a core skin bacterial community: towards a health index for marine mammals?

作者信息

Apprill Amy, Robbins Jooke, Eren A Murat, Pack Adam A, Reveillaud Julie, Mattila David, Moore Michael, Niemeyer Misty, Moore Kathleen M T, Mincer Tracy J

机构信息

Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Woods Hole, Massachusetts, United States of America.

Center for Coastal Studies, Provincetown, Massachusetts, United States of America.

出版信息

PLoS One. 2014 Mar 26;9(3):e90785. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0090785. eCollection 2014.

Abstract

Microbes are now well regarded for their important role in mammalian health. The microbiology of skin--a unique interface between the host and environment--is a major research focus in human health and skin disorders, but is less explored in other mammals. Here, we report on a cross-population study of the skin-associated bacterial community of humpback whales (Megaptera novaeangliae), and examine the potential for a core bacterial community and its variability with host (endogenous) or geographic/environmental (exogenous) specific factors. Skin biopsies or freshly sloughed skin from 56 individuals were sampled from populations in the North Atlantic, North Pacific and South Pacific oceans and bacteria were characterized using 454 pyrosequencing of SSU rRNA genes. Phylogenetic and statistical analyses revealed the ubiquity and abundance of bacteria belonging to the Flavobacteria genus Tenacibaculum and the Gammaproteobacteria genus Psychrobacter across the whale populations. Scanning electron microscopy of skin indicated that microbial cells colonize the skin surface. Despite the ubiquity of Tenacibaculum and Psychrobater spp., the relative composition of the skin-bacterial community differed significantly by geographic area as well as metabolic state of the animals (feeding versus starving during migration and breeding), suggesting that both exogenous and endogenous factors may play a role in influencing the skin-bacteria. Further, characteristics of the skin bacterial community from these free-swimming individuals were assembled and compared to two entangled and three dead individuals, revealing a decrease in the central or core bacterial community members (Tenacibaculum and Psychrobater spp.), as well as the emergence of potential pathogens in the latter cases. This is the first discovery of a cross-population, shared skin bacterial community. This research suggests that the skin bacteria may be connected to humpback health and immunity and could possibly serve as a useful index for health and skin disorder monitoring of threatened and endangered marine mammals.

摘要

微生物因其在哺乳动物健康中的重要作用而受到广泛关注。皮肤微生物学——宿主与环境之间的独特界面——是人类健康和皮肤疾病的主要研究重点,但在其他哺乳动物中的研究较少。在此,我们报告了一项关于座头鲸(Megaptera novaeangliae)皮肤相关细菌群落的跨种群研究,并探讨了核心细菌群落的潜力及其随宿主(内源性)或地理/环境(外源性)特定因素的变异性。从北大西洋、北太平洋和南太平洋的种群中采集了56头座头鲸的皮肤活检样本或新鲜脱落的皮肤,并使用SSU rRNA基因的454焦磷酸测序对细菌进行了表征。系统发育和统计分析表明,在所有座头鲸种群中普遍存在且数量丰富的细菌属于黄杆菌属的Tenacibaculum和γ-变形菌属的嗜冷杆菌属。皮肤的扫描电子显微镜检查表明,微生物细胞定殖在皮肤表面。尽管Tenacibaculum和嗜冷杆菌属普遍存在,但皮肤细菌群落的相对组成因地理区域以及动物的代谢状态(迁徙和繁殖期间进食与饥饿)而有显著差异,这表明外源性和内源性因素可能都在影响皮肤细菌方面发挥作用。此外,将这些自由游动个体的皮肤细菌群落特征与两头被困和三头死亡个体进行了汇总和比较,结果显示后一种情况下核心细菌群落成员(Tenacibaculum和嗜冷杆菌属)数量减少,同时出现了潜在病原体。这是首次发现跨种群共享的皮肤细菌群落。这项研究表明,皮肤细菌可能与座头鲸的健康和免疫力相关,并且有可能作为监测受威胁和濒危海洋哺乳动物健康和皮肤疾病的有用指标。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/e181/3966734/c56b25c98acf/pone.0090785.g001.jpg

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