Moeller Andrew H, Foerster Steffen, Wilson Michael L, Pusey Anne E, Hahn Beatrice H, Ochman Howard
Department of Integrative Biology, University of California, Berkeley, 1005 Valley Life Sciences Building #3101, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA.
Department of Evolutionary Anthropology, Duke University, 104 Biological Sciences Building, Durham, NC 27708, USA.
Sci Adv. 2016 Jan 15;2(1):e1500997. doi: 10.1126/sciadv.1500997. eCollection 2016 Jan.
Animal sociality facilitates the transmission of pathogenic microorganisms among hosts, but the extent to which sociality enables animals' beneficial microbial associations is poorly understood. The question is critical because microbial communities, particularly those in the gut, are key regulators of host health. We show evidence that chimpanzee social interactions propagate microbial diversity in the gut microbiome both within and between host generations. Frequent social interaction promotes species richness within individual microbiomes as well as homogeneity among the gut community memberships of different chimpanzees. Sampling successive generations across multiple chimpanzee families suggests that infants inherited gut microorganisms primarily through social transmission. These results indicate that social behavior generates a pan-microbiome, preserving microbial diversity across evolutionary time scales and contributing to the evolution of host species-specific gut microbial communities.
动物的群居性促进了致病微生物在宿主间的传播,但群居性在多大程度上促进动物与有益微生物的共生关系却鲜为人知。这个问题至关重要,因为微生物群落,尤其是肠道中的微生物群落,是宿主健康的关键调节因子。我们有证据表明,黑猩猩的社交互动在宿主代内和代际间传播肠道微生物群的多样性。频繁的社交互动促进了个体微生物群内的物种丰富度以及不同黑猩猩肠道群落成员之间的同质性。对多个黑猩猩家族的连续几代进行采样表明,婴儿主要通过社交传播继承肠道微生物。这些结果表明,社会行为产生了一个泛微生物群,在进化时间尺度上保持微生物多样性,并有助于宿主物种特异性肠道微生物群落的进化。