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人如其食:圈养和野生仔乌贼及其浮游动物猎物肠道微生物群的基因组分析

You Are What You Eat: A Genomic Analysis of the Gut Microbiome of Captive and Wild Paralarvae and Their Zooplankton Prey.

作者信息

Roura Álvaro, Doyle Stephen R, Nande Manuel, Strugnell Jan M

机构信息

Department of Ecology, Environment and Evolution, La Trobe UniversityMelbourne, VIC, Australia.

Ecología y Biodiversidad Marina, Instituto de Investigaciones Marinas (CSIC)Vigo, Spain.

出版信息

Front Physiol. 2017 May 31;8:362. doi: 10.3389/fphys.2017.00362. eCollection 2017.

Abstract

The common octopus () is an attractive species for aquaculture, however, several challenges inhibit sustainable commercial production. Little is known about the early paralarval stages in the wild, including diet and intestinal microbiota, which likely play a significant role in development and vitality of this important life stage. High throughput sequencing was used to characterize the gastrointestinal microbiome of wild paralarvae collected from two different upwelling regions off the coast of North West Spain ( = 41) and Morocco ( = 35). These were compared to that of paralarvae reared with for up to 25 days in captivity ( = 29). In addition, the gastrointestinal microbiome of zooplankton prey (crabs, copepod and krill) was also analyzed to determine if the microbial communities present in wild paralarvae are derived from their diet. Paralarvae reared in captivity with showed a depletion of bacterial diversity, particularly after day 5, when almost half the bacterial species present on day 0 were lost and two bacterial families (Mycoplasmataceae and Vibrionaceae) dominated the microbial community. In contrast, bacterial diversity increased in wild paralarvae as they developed in the oceanic realm of both upwelling systems, likely due to the exposure of new bacterial communities via ingestion of a wide diversity of prey. Remarkably, the bacterial diversity of recently hatched paralarvae in captivity was similar to that of wild paralarvae and zooplankton, thus suggesting a marked effect of the diet in both the microbial community species diversity and evenness. This study provides a comprehensive overview of the bacterial communities inhabiting the gastrointestinal tract of paralarvae, and reveals new research lines to challenge the current bottlenecks preventing sustainable octopus aquaculture.

摘要

普通章鱼()是水产养殖中颇具吸引力的物种,然而,诸多挑战阻碍了其可持续商业生产。对于野生环境中的幼体章鱼早期阶段,包括其饮食和肠道微生物群,我们知之甚少,而这些因素可能在这一重要生命阶段的发育和活力中发挥着重要作用。利用高通量测序技术对从西班牙西北部海岸( = 41)和摩洛哥( = 35)两个不同上升流区域采集的野生幼体章鱼的胃肠道微生物群进行了特征分析。将这些结果与在圈养环境中用 饲养长达25天的幼体章鱼( = 29)的结果进行了比较。此外,还分析了浮游动物猎物(螃蟹、桡足类和磷虾)的胃肠道微生物群,以确定野生幼体章鱼中存在的微生物群落是否源自其饮食。在圈养环境中用 饲养的幼体章鱼显示出细菌多样性的减少,尤其是在第5天之后,此时第0天存在的细菌种类几乎损失了一半,两个细菌科(支原体科和弧菌科)在微生物群落中占主导地位。相比之下,野生幼体章鱼在两个上升流系统的海洋区域发育过程中细菌多样性增加,这可能是由于通过摄取多种猎物接触到了新的细菌群落。值得注意的是,圈养环境中刚孵化的幼体章鱼的细菌多样性与野生幼体章鱼和浮游动物的相似,因此表明饮食对微生物群落的物种多样性和均匀度都有显著影响。本研究全面概述了幼体章鱼胃肠道中的细菌群落,并揭示了新的研究方向,以应对当前阻碍章鱼可持续水产养殖的瓶颈问题。

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