Small Clayton M, Milligan-Myhre Kathryn, Bassham Susan, Guillemin Karen, Cresko William A
Institute of Ecology and Evolution, University of Oregon, Eugene, OR.
Institute of Molecular Biology, University of Oregon, Eugene, OR.
Genome Biol Evol. 2017 Mar 1;9(3):504-520. doi: 10.1093/gbe/evx014.
Recent studies of interactions between hosts and their resident microbes have revealed important ecological and evolutionary consequences that emerge from these complex interspecies relationships, including diseases that occur when the interactions go awry. Given the preponderance of these interactions, we hypothesized that effects of the microbiota on gene expression in the developing gut-an important aspect of host biology-would be pervasive, and that these effects would be both comparable in magnitude to and contingent on effects of the host genetic background. To evaluate the effects of the microbiota, host genotype, and their interaction on gene expression in the gut of a genetically diverse, gnotobiotic host model, the threespine stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus), we compared RNA-seq data among 84 larval fish. Surprisingly, we found that stickleback population and family differences explained substantially more gene expression variation than the presence of microbes. Expression levels of 72 genes, however, were affected by our microbiota treatment. These genes, including many associated with innate immunity, comprise a tractable subset of host genetic factors for precise, systems-level study of host-microbe interactions in the future. Importantly, our data also suggest subtle signatures of a statistical interaction between host genotype and the microbiota on expression patterns of genetic pathways associated with innate immunity, coagulation and complement cascades, focal adhesion, cancer, and peroxisomes. These genotype-by-environment interactions may prove to be important leads to the understanding of host genetic mechanisms commonly at the root of sometimes complex molecular relationships between hosts and their resident microbes.
近期关于宿主与其体内微生物相互作用的研究揭示了这些复杂种间关系所产生的重要生态和进化后果,其中包括当相互作用出现问题时引发的疾病。鉴于这些相互作用十分普遍,我们推测微生物群对发育中的肠道基因表达(宿主生物学的一个重要方面)的影响会很广泛,而且这些影响在程度上与宿主遗传背景的影响相当,并且取决于宿主遗传背景的影响。为了评估微生物群、宿主基因型及其相互作用对基因多样化的无菌宿主模型三刺鱼(Gasterosteus aculeatus)肠道基因表达的影响,我们比较了84条幼鱼的RNA测序数据。令人惊讶的是,我们发现三刺鱼种群和家族差异比微生物的存在能解释更多的基因表达变异。然而,72个基因的表达水平受到我们的微生物群处理的影响。这些基因,包括许多与先天免疫相关的基因,构成了一个易于处理的宿主遗传因子子集,便于未来对宿主 - 微生物相互作用进行精确的系统水平研究。重要的是,我们的数据还表明,宿主基因型与微生物群之间在与先天免疫、凝血和补体级联、粘着斑、癌症以及过氧化物酶体相关的遗传途径表达模式上存在统计相互作用的微妙特征。这些基因型与环境的相互作用可能被证明是理解宿主遗传机制的重要线索,而这些机制通常是宿主与其体内微生物之间有时复杂的分子关系的根源。