Kohl Kevin D, Oakeson Kelly F, Dunn Diane, Meyerholz David K, Dale Colin, Weiss Robert B, Dearing M Denise
Department of Biological Sciences, Vanderbilt University, 465 21st Ave South, Nashville, TN, 37235, USA.
Department of Biology, University of Utah, 257 South 1400 East, Salt Lake City, UT, 84112, USA.
BMC Genomics. 2017 Sep 6;18(1):697. doi: 10.1186/s12864-017-4101-z.
Harboring foregut microbial communities is considered a key innovation that allows herbivorous mammals to colonize new ecological niches. However, the functions of these chambers have only been well studied at the molecular level in ruminants. Here, we investigate gene expression in the foregut chamber of herbivorous rodents and ask whether these gene expression patterns are consistent with results in ruminants. We compared gene expression in foregut tissues of two rodent species: Stephen's woodrat (Neotoma stephensi), which harbors a dense foregut microbial community, and the lab rat (Rattus norvegicus), which lacks such a community.
We found that woodrats have higher abundances of transcripts associated with smooth muscle processes, specifically a higher expression of the smoothelin-like 1 gene, which may assist in contractile properties of this tissue to retain food material in the foregut chamber. The expression of genes associated with keratinization and cornification exhibited a complex pattern of differences between the two species, suggesting distinct molecular mechanisms. Lab rats exhibited higher abundances of transcripts associated with immune function, likely to inhibit microbial growth in the foregut of this species.
Some of our results were consistent with previous findings in ruminants (high expression of facilitative glucose transporters, lower expression of B4galnt2), suggestive of possible convergent evolution, while other results were unclear, and perhaps represent novel host-microbe interactions in rodents. Overall, our results suggest that harboring a foregut microbiota is associated with changes to the functions and host-microbe interactions of the foregut tissues.
拥有前肠微生物群落被认为是一项关键创新,它使草食性哺乳动物能够开拓新的生态位。然而,这些腔室的功能仅在反刍动物中得到了深入的分子水平研究。在此,我们研究草食性啮齿动物前肠腔室中的基因表达,并探讨这些基因表达模式是否与反刍动物的研究结果一致。我们比较了两种啮齿动物前肠组织中的基因表达:斯蒂芬林鼠(Neotoma stephensi),其前肠拥有密集的微生物群落,以及实验室大鼠(Rattus norvegicus),其缺乏这样的群落。
我们发现林鼠中与平滑肌过程相关的转录本丰度更高,特别是平滑肌样 1 基因的表达更高,这可能有助于该组织的收缩特性,以将食物物质保留在前肠腔室中。与角质化和角化相关的基因表达在这两个物种之间呈现出复杂的差异模式,表明存在不同的分子机制。实验室大鼠中与免疫功能相关的转录本丰度更高,这可能是为了抑制该物种前肠中的微生物生长。
我们的一些结果与之前在反刍动物中的发现一致(促进性葡萄糖转运蛋白高表达,B4galnt2 低表达),提示可能存在趋同进化,而其他结果尚不清楚,可能代表了啮齿动物中新型的宿主 - 微生物相互作用。总体而言,我们的结果表明,拥有前肠微生物群与前肠组织的功能及宿主 - 微生物相互作用的变化有关。