Easson Cole G, Thacker Robert W
Department of Biology, University of Alabama at Birmingham Birmingham, AL, USA.
Front Microbiol. 2014 Oct 17;5:532. doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2014.00532. eCollection 2014.
Sponges (Porifera) can host diverse and abundant communities of microbial symbionts that make crucial contributions to host metabolism. Although these communities are often host-specific and hypothesized to co-evolve with their hosts, correlations between host phylogeny and microbiome community structure are rarely tested. As part of the Earth Microbiome Project (EMP), we surveyed the microbiomes associated with 20 species of tropical marine sponges collected over a narrow geographic range. We tested whether (1) univariate metrics of microbiome diversity displayed significant phylogenetic signal across the host phylogeny; (2) host identity and host phylogeny were significant factors in multivariate analyses of taxonomic and phylogenetic dissimilarity; and (3) different minimum read thresholds impacted these results. We observed significant differences in univariate metrics of diversity among host species for all read thresholds, with strong phylogenetic signal in the inverse Simpson's index of diversity (D). We observed a surprisingly wide range of variability in community dissimilarity within host species (4-73%); this variability was not related to microbial abundance within a host species. Taxonomic and phylogenetic dissimilarity were significantly impacted by host identity and host phylogeny when these factors were considered individually; when tested together, the effect of host phylogeny was reduced, but remained significant. In our dataset, this outcome is largely due to closely related host sponges harboring distinct microbial taxa. Host identity maintained a strong statistical signal at all minimum read thresholds. Although the identity of specific microbial taxa varied substantially among host sponges, closely related hosts tended to harbor microbial communities with similar patterns of relative abundance. We hypothesize that microbiomes with low D might be structured by regulation of the microbial community by the host or by the presence of competitively dominant symbionts that are themselves under selection for host specificity.
海绵动物(多孔动物门)可以容纳多样且丰富的微生物共生体群落,这些群落对宿主的新陈代谢起着至关重要的作用。尽管这些群落通常具有宿主特异性,并被假设与宿主共同进化,但宿主系统发育与微生物群落结构之间的相关性却很少得到验证。作为地球微生物组计划(EMP)的一部分,我们调查了在狭窄地理范围内采集的20种热带海洋海绵动物所关联的微生物组。我们测试了:(1)微生物组多样性的单变量指标在宿主系统发育中是否显示出显著的系统发育信号;(2)宿主身份和宿主系统发育在分类学和系统发育差异的多变量分析中是否是重要因素;(3)不同的最小读取阈值是否会影响这些结果。对于所有读取阈值,我们观察到宿主物种之间多样性的单变量指标存在显著差异,在多样性的逆辛普森指数(D)中具有很强的系统发育信号。我们观察到宿主物种内群落差异的变化范围惊人地广泛(4 - 73%);这种变化与宿主物种内的微生物丰度无关。当单独考虑这些因素时,分类学和系统发育差异受到宿主身份和宿主系统发育的显著影响;当一起测试时,宿主系统发育效应有所降低,但仍然显著。在我们的数据集中,这一结果主要是由于亲缘关系密切的宿主海绵动物含有不同的微生物类群。宿主身份在所有最小读取阈值下都保持着很强的统计信号。尽管特定微生物类群的身份在宿主海绵动物之间有很大差异,但亲缘关系密切的宿主往往含有相对丰度模式相似的微生物群落。我们推测,D值较低的微生物组可能是由宿主对微生物群落的调控或存在本身因宿主特异性而受到选择的竞争性优势共生体所构建的。