Mushegian Alexandra A, Ebert Dieter
Zoological Institute, University of Basel, Switzerland.
Bioessays. 2016 Jan;38(1):100-8. doi: 10.1002/bies.201500074. Epub 2015 Nov 16.
While examples of bacteria benefiting eukaryotes are increasingly documented, studies examining effects of eukaryote hosts on microbial fitness are rare. Beneficial bacteria are often called "mutualistic" even if mutual reciprocity of benefits has not been demonstrated and despite the plausibility of other explanations for these microbes' beneficial effects on host fitness. Furthermore, beneficial bacteria often occur in diverse communities, making mutualism both empirically and conceptually difficult to demonstrate. We suggest reserving the terms "mutualism" and "parasitism" for pairwise interactions where the relationship is largely independent of other species and can be verified by measuring the fitness effect experienced by both partners. In hosts with diverse microbial communities, we propose re-formulating some of the essential questions of symbiosis research - e.g. concerning specificity, transmission mode, and common evolutionary fates - as questions of community ecology and ecosystem function, allowing important biological interactions to be investigated without making assumptions about reciprocity. Understanding the fitness of host-associated bacteria is a crucial component of investigations into the role of microbes in eukaryote evolution.
虽然越来越多的文献记载了细菌对真核生物有益的例子,但研究真核生物宿主对微生物适应性影响的却很少。即使尚未证明有益细菌存在互利互惠关系,且尽管这些微生物对宿主适应性产生有益影响的其他解释似乎合理,但有益细菌通常仍被称为“共生菌”。此外,有益细菌常存在于多样的群落中,这使得共生关系在实证和概念上都难以证明。我们建议将“共生”和“寄生”这两个术语保留用于成对相互作用,其中这种关系在很大程度上独立于其他物种,并且可以通过测量双方所经历的适应性效应来验证。在具有多样微生物群落的宿主中,我们建议将共生研究的一些基本问题——例如关于特异性、传播方式和共同进化命运的问题——重新表述为群落生态学和生态系统功能的问题,以便在不假设互惠性的情况下研究重要的生物相互作用。了解宿主相关细菌的适应性是研究微生物在真核生物进化中作用的关键组成部分。