Ott Brittany M, Rickards Allen, Gehrke Lauren, Rio Rita V M
Department of Biology, West Virginia University Morgantown, WV, USA.
Front Microbiol. 2015 Jan 9;5:757. doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2014.00757. eCollection 2014.
Microbial transmission through mucosal-mediated mechanisms is widespread throughout the animal kingdom. One example of this occurs with Hirudo verbana, the medicinal leech, where host attraction to shed conspecific mucus facilitates horizontal transmission of a predominant gut symbiont, the Gammaproteobacterium Aeromonas veronii. However, whether this mucus may harbor other bacteria has not been examined. Here, we characterize the microbiota of shed leech mucus through Illumina deep sequencing of the V3-V4 hypervariable region of the 16S rRNA gene. Additionally, Restriction Fragment Length Polymorphism (RFLP) typing with subsequent Sanger Sequencing of a 16S rRNA gene clone library provided qualitative confirmation of the microbial composition. Phylogenetic analyses of full-length 16S rRNA sequences were performed to examine microbial taxonomic distribution. Analyses using both technologies indicate the dominance of the Bacteroidetes and Proteobacteria phyla within the mucus microbiota. We determined the presence of other previously described leech symbionts, in addition to a number of putative novel leech-associated bacteria. A second predominant gut symbiont, the Rikenella-like bacteria, was also identified within mucus and exhibited similar population dynamics to A. veronii, suggesting persistence in syntrophy beyond the gut. Interestingly, the most abundant bacterial genus belonged to Pedobacter, which includes members capable of producing heparinase, an enzyme that degrades the anticoagulant, heparin. Additionally, bacteria associated with denitrification and sulfate cycling were observed, indicating an abundance of these anions within mucus, likely originating from the leech excretory system. A diverse microbiota harbored within shed mucus has significant potential implications for the evolution of microbiomes, including opportunities for gene transfer and utility in host capture of a diverse group of symbionts.
通过黏膜介导机制进行的微生物传播在动物界广泛存在。药用蛭(Hirudo verbana)就是一个例子,宿主对同种脱落黏液的吸引促进了一种主要肠道共生菌——γ-变形菌维氏气单胞菌(Aeromonas veronii)的水平传播。然而,这种黏液中是否可能含有其他细菌尚未得到研究。在这里,我们通过对16S rRNA基因V3 - V4高变区进行Illumina深度测序来表征脱落水蛭黏液的微生物群。此外,通过限制性片段长度多态性(RFLP)分型以及随后对16S rRNA基因克隆文库进行桑格测序,对微生物组成进行了定性确认。对全长16S rRNA序列进行系统发育分析,以研究微生物的分类分布。使用这两种技术的分析表明,黏液微生物群中拟杆菌门和变形菌门占主导地位。我们确定了其他一些先前描述的水蛭共生菌的存在,此外还有一些假定的与水蛭相关的新型细菌。在黏液中还鉴定出了第二种主要的肠道共生菌——类理研菌属细菌,其种群动态与维氏气单胞菌相似,表明在肠道外的互生关系中持续存在。有趣的是,最丰富的细菌属属于Pedobacter,其中包括能够产生肝素酶的成员,肝素酶是一种降解抗凝血剂肝素的酶。此外,还观察到与反硝化和硫酸盐循环相关的细菌,这表明黏液中这些阴离子含量丰富,可能源自水蛭的排泄系统。脱落黏液中所含的多样微生物群对微生物组的进化具有重大潜在影响,包括基因转移的机会以及在宿主捕获多样共生菌群体中的作用。