Webster Nicole S, Thomas Torsten
Australian Institute of Marine Science, Townsville, QLD, Australia
Centre for Marine Bio-Innovation, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia.
mBio. 2016 Apr 21;7(2):e00135-16. doi: 10.1128/mBio.00135-16.
A paradigm shift has recently transformed the field of biological science; molecular advances have revealed how fundamentally important microorganisms are to many aspects of a host's phenotype and evolution. In the process, an era of "holobiont" research has emerged to investigate the intricate network of interactions between a host and its symbiotic microbial consortia. Marine sponges are early-diverging metazoa known for hosting dense, specific, and often highly diverse microbial communities. Here we synthesize current thoughts about the environmental and evolutionary forces that influence the diversity, specificity, and distribution of microbial symbionts within the sponge holobiont, explore the physiological pathways that contribute to holobiont function, and describe the molecular mechanisms that underpin the establishment and maintenance of these symbiotic partnerships. The collective genomes of the sponge holobiont form the sponge hologenome, and we highlight how the forces that define a sponge's phenotype in fact act on the genomic interplay between the different components of the holobiont.
最近,一场范式转变改变了生物科学领域;分子层面的进展揭示了微生物对于宿主表型和进化的许多方面具有何等根本的重要性。在此过程中,一个“全生物”研究的时代应运而生,以探究宿主与其共生微生物群落之间复杂的相互作用网络。海洋海绵是早期分化的后生动物,以拥有密集、特定且通常高度多样的微生物群落而闻名。在这里,我们综合了当前关于影响海绵全生物体内微生物共生体的多样性、特异性和分布的环境及进化力量的观点,探讨了有助于全生物功能的生理途径,并描述了支撑这些共生关系建立和维持的分子机制。海绵全生物的集体基因组构成了海绵全基因组,我们强调了定义海绵表型的力量实际上是如何作用于全生物不同组成部分之间的基因组相互作用的。