Department of Microbiology, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon, USA.
College of Veterinary Medicine, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon, USA.
mBio. 2018 Sep 11;9(5):e01348-18. doi: 10.1128/mBio.01348-18.
Our knowledge of how the gut microbiome relates to mammalian evolution benefits from the identification of gut microbial taxa that are unexpectedly prevalent or unexpectedly conserved across mammals. Such taxa enable experimental determination of the traits needed for such microbes to succeed as gut generalists, as well as those traits that impact mammalian fitness. However, the punctuated resolution of microbial taxonomy may limit our ability to detect conserved gut microbes, especially in cases in which broadly related microbial lineages possess shared traits that drive their apparent ubiquity across mammals. To advance the discovery of conserved mammalian gut microbes, we developed a novel ecophylogenetic approach to taxonomy that groups microbes into taxonomic units based on their shared ancestry and their common distribution across mammals. Applying this approach to previously generated gut microbiome data uncovered monophyletic clades of gut bacteria that are conserved across mammals. It also resolved microbial clades exclusive to and conserved among particular mammalian lineages. Conserved clades often manifest phylogenetic patterns, such as cophylogeny with their host, that indicate that they are subject to selective processes, such as host filtering. Moreover, this analysis identified variation in the rate at which mammals acquire or lose conserved microbial clades and resolved a human-accelerated loss of conserved clades. Collectively, the data from this study reveal mammalian gut microbiota that possess traits linked to mammalian phylogeny, point to the existence of a core set of microbes that comprise the mammalian gut microbiome, and clarify potential evolutionary or ecologic mechanisms driving the gut microbiome's diversification throughout mammalian evolution. Our understanding of mammalian evolution has become microbiome-aware. While emerging research links mammalian biodiversity and the gut microbiome, we lack insight into which microbes potentially impact mammalian evolution. Microbes common to diverse mammalian species may be strong candidates, as their absence in the gut may affect how the microbiome functionally contributes to mammalian physiology to adversely affect fitness. Identifying such conserved gut microbes is thus important to ultimately assessing the microbiome's potential role in mammalian evolution. To advance their discovery, we developed an approach that identifies ancestrally related groups of microbes that distribute across mammals in a way that indicates their collective conservation. These conserved clades are presumed to have evolved a trait in their ancestor that matters to their distribution across mammals and which has been retained among clade members. We found not only that such clades do exist among mammals but also that they appear to be subject to natural selection and characterize human evolution.
我们对肠道微生物组与哺乳动物进化之间关系的认识得益于鉴定出那些在哺乳动物中出乎意料地普遍存在或出乎意料地保守的肠道微生物类群。这些类群使我们能够确定这些微生物作为肠道广生种所需的特征,以及那些影响哺乳动物适应性的特征。然而,微生物分类学的间断性解决可能限制了我们检测保守肠道微生物的能力,尤其是在广泛相关的微生物谱系拥有共同特征,从而导致它们在哺乳动物中普遍存在的情况下。为了推进保守的哺乳动物肠道微生物的发现,我们开发了一种新的生态系统发生分类学方法,该方法根据微生物的共同祖先和在哺乳动物中的共同分布将微生物分为分类单元。将这种方法应用于先前生成的肠道微生物组数据,揭示了跨哺乳动物保守的单系细菌菌群。它还解决了特定哺乳动物谱系特有的和保守的微生物类群。保守的类群通常表现出与宿主共进化的系统发育模式,这表明它们受到宿主过滤等选择过程的影响。此外,这项分析确定了哺乳动物获得或失去保守微生物类群的速度变化,并解决了人类加速失去保守类群的问题。总的来说,这项研究的数据揭示了具有与哺乳动物系统发育相关特征的哺乳动物肠道微生物群,指出了构成哺乳动物肠道微生物组的核心微生物类群的存在,并阐明了潜在的进化或生态机制,这些机制推动了肠道微生物组在哺乳动物进化过程中的多样化。我们对哺乳动物进化的理解已经变得与微生物组有关。虽然新兴的研究将哺乳动物生物多样性与肠道微生物组联系起来,但我们缺乏对哪些微生物可能影响哺乳动物进化的了解。多样化的哺乳动物物种共有的微生物可能是强有力的候选者,因为它们在肠道中的缺失可能会影响微生物组对哺乳动物生理学的功能贡献,从而对适应性产生不利影响。因此,确定这些保守的肠道微生物对最终评估微生物组在哺乳动物进化中的潜在作用非常重要。为了推进它们的发现,我们开发了一种方法,可以识别在哺乳动物中以表明其集体保守性分布的祖先相关微生物群。这些保守的类群被认为在其祖先中进化出了一种对其在哺乳动物中的分布很重要的特征,并且在类群成员中保留了下来。我们不仅发现了哺乳动物中存在这样的类群,而且它们似乎受到自然选择的影响,并描绘了人类的进化。