Poultry Production and Product Safety Research, Agricultural Research Service, United States Department of Agriculture, Fayetteville, AR, 72701, USA.
Department of Computer Science, Cork Institute of Technology, Cork, Ireland.
Microbiome. 2021 Feb 2;9(1):38. doi: 10.1186/s40168-020-00962-2.
Microbial endocrinology, which is the study of neuroendocrine-based interkingdom signaling, provides a causal mechanistic framework for understanding the bi-directional crosstalk between the host and microbiome, especially as regards the effect of stress on health and disease. The importance of the cecal microbiome in avian health is well-recognized, yet little is understood regarding the mechanisms underpinning the avian host-microbiome relationship. Neuroendocrine plasticity of avian tissues that are focal points of host-microbiome interaction, such as the gut and lung, has likewise received limited attention. Avian in vivo models that enable the study of the neuroendocrine dynamic between host and microbiome are needed. As such, we utilized Japanese quail (Coturnix japonica) that diverge in corticosterone response to stress to examine the relationship between stress-related neurochemical concentrations at sites of host-microbe interaction, such as the gut, and the cecal microbiome.
Our results demonstrate that birds which contrast in corticosterone response to stress show profound separation in cecal microbial community structure as well as exhibit differences in tissue neurochemical concentrations and structural morphologies of the gut. Changes in neurochemicals known to be affected by the microbiome were also identified in tissues outside of the gut, suggesting a potential relationship in birds between the cecal microbiome and overall avian physiology.
The present study provides the first evidence that the structure of the avian cecal microbial community is shaped by selection pressure on the bird for neuroendocrine response to stress. Identification of unique region-dependent neurochemical changes in the intestinal tract following stress highlights environmental stressors as potential drivers of microbial endocrinology-based mechanisms of avian host-microbiome dialogue. Together, these results demonstrate that tissue neurochemical concentrations in the avian gut may be related to the cecal microbiome and reveal the Japanese quail as a novel avian model in which to further examine the mechanisms underpinning these relationships. Video abstract.
微生物内分泌学是研究基于神经内分泌的种间信号传递,为理解宿主与微生物组之间的双向串扰提供了因果机制框架,尤其是在压力对健康和疾病的影响方面。盲肠微生物组对禽类健康的重要性已得到广泛认可,但对于支撑宿主-微生物组关系的机制知之甚少。禽类组织的神经内分泌可塑性是宿主-微生物组相互作用的焦点,例如肠道和肺部,但也受到了有限的关注。需要开发能够研究宿主与微生物组之间神经内分泌动态的禽类体内模型。因此,我们利用日本鹌鹑(Coturnix japonica)来研究宿主与微生物组之间的神经内分泌动态,这些鹌鹑在应对压力时的皮质酮反应存在差异,以研究宿主-微生物相互作用部位(如肠道)的应激相关神经化学浓度与盲肠微生物组之间的关系。
我们的研究结果表明,在应激时皮质酮反应存在差异的鸟类,其盲肠微生物群落结构存在明显差异,并且组织神经化学浓度和肠道结构形态也存在差异。在肠道外组织中也发现了已知受微生物组影响的神经化学物质的变化,这表明鸟类盲肠微生物组与整体禽类生理学之间可能存在潜在关系。
本研究首次提供了证据表明,鸟类盲肠微生物群落的结构是由鸟类对神经内分泌应激反应的选择压力塑造的。应激后肠道中出现的独特区域依赖性神经化学变化表明,环境应激源可能是基于微生物内分泌的禽类宿主-微生物组对话机制的潜在驱动因素。这些结果表明,禽类肠道组织的神经化学浓度可能与盲肠微生物组有关,并揭示了日本鹌鹑作为一种新的禽类模型,可进一步研究支撑这些关系的机制。视频摘要。