Oliveira Bruno C M, Murray Maureen, Tseng Florina, Widmer Giovanni
Department of Infectious Disease & Global Health, Cummings School of Veterinary Medicine at Tufts University, North Grafton, MA, 01536, USA.
Universidade Estadual Paulista (UNESP), Faculdade de Medicina Veterinária, Araçatuba, Brazil.
Anim Microbiome. 2020 May 6;2(1):15. doi: 10.1186/s42523-020-00035-7.
The microorganisms populating the gastro-intestinal tract of vertebrates, collectively known as "microbiota", play an essential role in digestion and are important in regulating the immune response. Whereas the intestinal microbiota in humans and model organisms has been studied for many years, much less is known about the microbiota populating the intestinal tract of wild animals.
The relatively large number of raptors admitted to the Tufts Wildlife Clinic on the Cummings School of Veterinary Medicine at Tufts University campus provided a unique opportunity to investigate the bacterial microbiota in these birds. Opportunistic collection of fecal samples from raptors of 7 different species in the orders Strigiformes, Accipitriformes, and Falconiformes with different medical histories generated a collection of 46 microbiota samples. Based on 16S amplicon sequencing of fecal DNA, large β-diversity values were observed. Many comparisons exceeded weighted UniFrac distances of 0.9. Microbiota diversity did not segregate with the taxonomy of the host; no significant difference between microbiota from Strigiformes and from Accipitriformes/Falconiformes were observed. In contrast, in a sample of 22 birds admitted for rehabilitation, a significant effect of captivity was found. The change in microbiota profile was driven by an expansion of the proportion of Actinobacteria. Based on a small number of raptors treated with anti-microbials, no significant effect of these treatments on microbiota α-diversity was observed.
The concept of "meta-organism conservation", i.e., conservation efforts focused on the host and its intestinal microbiome has recently been proposed. The observed effect of captivity on the fecal microbiota is relevant to understanding the response of wildlife to captivity and optimizing wildlife rehabilitation and conservation efforts.
脊椎动物胃肠道中的微生物群落,统称为“微生物群”,在消化过程中发挥着重要作用,并且在调节免疫反应方面也很重要。尽管人类和模式生物的肠道微生物群已经被研究多年,但对于野生动物肠道中的微生物群了解却少得多。
大量猛禽被送往塔夫茨大学卡明斯兽医学院的塔夫茨野生动物诊所,这为研究这些鸟类的细菌微生物群提供了独特的机会。从7种不同种类、具有不同病史的鸮形目、鹰形目和隼形目猛禽中机会性地采集粪便样本,共获得了46个微生物群样本。基于粪便DNA的16S扩增子测序,观察到较大的β-多样性值。许多比较超过了加权UniFrac距离0.9。微生物群多样性与宿主的分类学没有明显关联;未观察到鸮形目与鹰形目/隼形目微生物群之间的显著差异。相比之下,在22只接受康复治疗的鸟类样本中,发现圈养有显著影响。微生物群谱的变化是由放线菌比例的增加驱动的。基于少数接受抗菌药物治疗的猛禽,未观察到这些治疗对微生物群α-多样性有显著影响。
最近提出了“元生物保护”的概念,即保护工作聚焦于宿主及其肠道微生物组。观察到的圈养对粪便微生物群的影响,对于理解野生动物对圈养的反应以及优化野生动物康复和保护工作具有重要意义。