Barelli Claudia, Albanese Davide, Stumpf Rebecca M, Asangba Abigail, Donati Claudio, Rovero Francesco, Hauffe Heidi C
Department of Biodiversity and Molecular Ecology, Research and Innovation Centre, Fondazione Edmund Mach, San Michele all'Adige, Italy
Carl R. Woese Institute for Genomic Biology, University of Illinois, Urbana, Illinois, USA.
mSystems. 2020 May 26;5(3):e00061-20. doi: 10.1128/mSystems.00061-20.
Human exploitation and destruction of tropical resources are currently threatening innumerable wild animal species, altering natural ecosystems and thus, food resources, with profound effects on gut microbiota. Given their conservation status and the importance to tropical ecosystems, wild nonhuman primates make excellent models to investigate the effect of human disturbance on the diversity of host-associated microbiota. Previous investigations have revealed a loss of fecal bacterial diversity in primates living in degraded compared to intact forests. However, these data are available for a limited number of species, and very limited information is available on the fungal taxa hosted by the gut. Here, we estimated the diversity and composition of gut bacterial and fungal communities in two primates living sympatrically in both human-modified and pristine forests in the Udzungwa Mountains of Tanzania. Noninvasively collected fecal samples of 12 groups of the Udzungwa red colobus () ( = 89), a native and endangered primate (arboreal and predominantly leaf-eating), and five groups of the yellow baboon () ( = 69), a common species of least concern (ground-feeding and omnivorous), were analyzed by the V1-V3 region of the 16S rRNA gene (bacterial) and ITS1-ITS2 (fungal) sequencing. Gut bacterial diversities were associated with habitat in both species, most likely depending on their ecological niches and associated digestive physiology, dietary strategies, and locomotor behavior. In addition, fungal communities also show distinctive traits across hosts and habitat type, highlighting the importance of investigating this relatively unexplored gut component. Gut microbiota diversity has become the subject of extensive research in human and nonhuman animals, linking diversity and composition to gut function and host health. Because wild primates are good indicators of tropical ecosystem health, we developed the idea that they are a suitable model to observe the consequences of advancing global change (e.g., habitat degradation) on gut microbiota. So far, most of the studies focus mainly on gut bacteria; however, they are not the only component of the gut: fungi also serve essential functions in gut homeostasis. Here, for the first time, we explore and measure diversity and composition of both bacterial and fungal microbiota components of two tropical primate species living in highly different habitat types (intact versus degraded forests). Results on their microbiota diversity and composition are discussed in light of conservation issues and potential applications.
目前,人类对热带资源的开发和破坏正威胁着无数野生动物物种,改变自然生态系统,进而影响食物资源,对肠道微生物群产生深远影响。鉴于其保护状况以及对热带生态系统的重要性,野生非人灵长类动物是研究人类干扰对宿主相关微生物群多样性影响的优秀模型。此前的研究表明,与生活在未受破坏森林中的灵长类动物相比,生活在退化森林中的灵长类动物粪便细菌多样性有所丧失。然而,这些数据仅涉及少数物种,关于肠道中真菌类群的信息非常有限。在此,我们估计了坦桑尼亚乌德宗瓦山脉中生活在人类改造森林和原始森林中的两种同域分布灵长类动物肠道细菌和真菌群落的多样性及组成。我们对12群乌德宗瓦红疣猴(学名:Procolobus gordonorum)(n = 89)和5群黄狒狒(学名:Papio cynocephalus)(n = 69)的粪便样本进行了非侵入性采集,前者是一种本土濒危灵长类动物(树栖,主要以树叶为食),后者是一种最不关注的常见物种(地栖,杂食性)。通过16S rRNA基因的V1 - V3区域(细菌)和ITS1 - ITS2(真菌)测序对样本进行分析。两种物种的肠道细菌多样性均与栖息地有关,这很可能取决于它们的生态位以及相关的消化生理、饮食策略和运动行为。此外,真菌群落也在不同宿主和栖息地类型中表现出独特特征,凸显了研究这一相对未被充分探索的肠道组成部分的重要性。肠道微生物群多样性已成为人类和非人类动物广泛研究的主题,并将其多样性和组成与肠道功能及宿主健康联系起来。由于野生灵长类动物是热带生态系统健康的良好指标,我们提出它们是观察全球变化(如栖息地退化)对肠道微生物群影响的合适模型这一观点。到目前为止,大多数研究主要集中在肠道细菌;然而,它们并非肠道的唯一组成部分:真菌在肠道内环境稳定中也发挥着重要作用。在此,我们首次探索并测量了生活在截然不同栖息地类型(完整森林与退化森林)中的两种热带灵长类动物肠道细菌和真菌微生物群组成部分的多样性及组成。我们根据保护问题和潜在应用对它们的微生物群多样性和组成结果进行了讨论。