Xue Zhengsheng, Zhang Wenping, Wang Linghua, Hou Rong, Zhang Menghui, Fei Lisong, Zhang Xiaojun, Huang He, Bridgewater Laura C, Jiang Yi, Jiang Chenglin, Zhao Liping, Pang Xiaoyan, Zhang Zhihe
State Key Laboratory of Microbial Metabolism, School of Life Sciences and Biotechnology, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Shanghai, People's Republic of China.
Sichuan Key Laboratory of Conservation Biology on Endangered Wildlife, Chengdu Research Base of Giant Panda Breeding, Chengdu, People's Republic of China.
mBio. 2015 May 19;6(3):e00022-15. doi: 10.1128/mBio.00022-15.
The giant panda evolved from omnivorous bears. It lives on a bamboo-dominated diet at present, but it still retains a typical carnivorous digestive system and is genetically deficient in cellulose-digesting enzymes. To find out whether this endangered mammalian species, like other herbivores, has successfully developed a gut microbiota adapted to its fiber-rich diet, we conducted a 16S rRNA gene-based large-scale structural profiling of the giant panda fecal microbiota. Forty-five captive individuals were sampled in spring, summer, and late autumn within 1 year. Significant intraindividual variations in the diversity and structure of gut microbiota across seasons were observed in this population, which were even greater than the variations between individuals. Compared with published data sets involving 124 gut microbiota profiles from 54 mammalian species, these giant pandas, together with 9 captive and 7 wild individuals investigated previously, showed extremely low gut microbiota diversity and an overall structure that diverged from those of nonpanda herbivores but converged with those of carnivorous and omnivorous bears. The giant panda did not harbor putative cellulose-degrading phylotypes such as Ruminococcaceae and Bacteroides bacteria that are typically enriched in other herbivores, but instead, its microbiota was dominated by Escherichia/Shigella and Streptococcus bacteria. Members of the class Clostridia were common and abundant in the giant panda gut microbiota, but most of the members present were absent in other herbivores and were not phylogenetically related with known cellulolytic lineages. Therefore, the giant panda appears not to have evolved a gut microbiota compatible with its newly adopted diet, which may adversely influence the coevolutionary fitness of this herbivore.
The giant panda, an endangered mammalian species endemic to western China, is well known for its unique bamboo diet. Unlike other herbivores that have successfully evolved anatomically specialized digestive systems to efficiently deconstruct fibrous plant matter, the giant panda still retains a gastrointestinal tract typical of carnivores. We characterized the fecal bacterial communities from a giant panda population to determine whether this animal relies on its symbiotic gut microbiota to cope with the complex carbohydrates that dominate its diet, as is common in other herbivores. We found that the giant panda gut microbiota is low in diversity and highly variable across seasons. It also shows an overall composition typical of bears and entirely differentiated from other herbivores, with low levels of putative cellulose-digesting bacteria. The gut microbiota of this herbivore, therefore, may not have well adapted to its highly fibrous diet, suggesting a potential link with its poor digestive efficiency.
大熊猫由杂食性熊类进化而来。目前它以竹子为主食,但仍保留典型的肉食性消化系统,且在基因上缺乏纤维素消化酶。为了弄清楚这种濒危哺乳动物是否像其他食草动物一样,成功地发展出了适应其富含纤维饮食的肠道微生物群,我们对大熊猫粪便微生物群进行了基于16S rRNA基因的大规模结构分析。在1年内的春季、夏季和深秋对45只圈养大熊猫进行了采样。在这个种群中观察到肠道微生物群的多样性和结构在不同季节存在显著的个体内差异,甚至大于个体间的差异。与涉及54种哺乳动物的124个肠道微生物群图谱的已发表数据集相比,这些大熊猫以及之前研究的9只圈养个体和7只野生个体,显示出极低的肠道微生物群多样性,其整体结构与非大熊猫食草动物不同,但与肉食性和杂食性熊类趋同。大熊猫没有像在其他食草动物中通常富集的如瘤胃球菌科和拟杆菌属细菌等假定的纤维素降解系统发育型,相反,其微生物群以大肠杆菌/志贺氏菌属和链球菌属细菌为主。梭菌纲的成员在大熊猫肠道微生物群中常见且丰富,但大多数存在的成员在其他食草动物中不存在,并且在系统发育上与已知的纤维素分解谱系无关。因此,大熊猫似乎没有进化出与其新采用的饮食相适应的肠道微生物群,这可能会对这种食草动物的协同进化适应性产生不利影响。
大熊猫是中国西部特有的濒危哺乳动物,以其独特的竹子饮食而闻名。与其他成功进化出解剖学上专门的消化系统以有效分解纤维状植物物质的食草动物不同,大熊猫仍然保留着典型的食肉动物胃肠道。我们对大熊猫种群的粪便细菌群落进行了特征分析,以确定这种动物是否像其他食草动物一样,依靠其共生的肠道微生物群来应对其饮食中占主导地位的复杂碳水化合物。我们发现大熊猫肠道微生物群多样性低,且在不同季节变化很大。它还显示出典型的熊类整体组成,并与其他食草动物完全不同,假定的纤维素消化细菌水平较低。因此,这种食草动物的肠道微生物群可能没有很好地适应其高纤维饮食,这表明其消化效率低下可能存在潜在联系。