Bankers Laura, Dahan Dylan, Neiman Maurine, Adrian-Tucci Claire, Frost Crystal, Hurst Gregory D D, King Kayla C
Department of Biology University of Iowa Iowa City IA USA.
University of Colorado - Anschutz Medical Campus Aurora CO USA.
Evol Appl. 2020 Nov 20;14(3):770-780. doi: 10.1111/eva.13158. eCollection 2021 Mar.
Resident microbes (microbiota) can shape host organismal function and adaptation in the face of environmental change. Invasion of new habitats exposes hosts to novel selection pressures, but little is known about the impact on microbiota and the host-microbiome relationship (e.g., how rapidly new microbial associations are formed, whether microbes influence invasion success). We used high-throughput 16S rRNA sequencing of New Zealand (native) and European (invasive) populations of the freshwater snail and found that while invaders do carry over some core microbial taxa from New Zealand, their microbial community is largely distinct. This finding highlights that invasions can result in the formation of novel host-microbiome relationships. We further show that the native microbiome is composed of fewer core microbes than the microbiome of invasive snails, suggesting that the microbiota is streamlined to a narrower set of core members. Furthermore, native snails exhibit relatively low alpha diversity but high inter-individual variation, whereas invasive snails have higher alpha diversity but are relatively similar to each other. Together, our findings demonstrate that microbiota comparisons across native and invasive populations can reveal the impact of a long coevolutionary history and specialization of microbes in the native host range, as well as new associations occurring after invasion. We lay essential groundwork for understanding how microbial relationships affect invasion success and how microbes may be utilized in the control of invasive hosts.
常驻微生物(微生物群)能够塑造宿主生物体的功能,并使其在面对环境变化时具备适应性。新栖息地的入侵使宿主面临新的选择压力,但对于这种入侵对微生物群以及宿主 - 微生物组关系的影响(例如,新的微生物关联形成的速度有多快、微生物是否影响入侵成功),我们却知之甚少。我们对新西兰(本土)和欧洲(入侵地)的淡水蜗牛种群进行了高通量16S rRNA测序,发现虽然入侵蜗牛确实从新西兰携带了一些核心微生物类群,但它们的微生物群落大体上是不同的。这一发现凸显出入侵可导致新的宿主 - 微生物组关系的形成。我们进一步表明,本土微生物组的核心微生物比入侵蜗牛的微生物组少,这表明微生物群被精简为一组更窄的核心成员。此外,本土蜗牛表现出相对较低的α多样性,但个体间差异较大,而入侵蜗牛具有较高的α多样性,但彼此相对相似。总之,我们的研究结果表明,对本土和入侵种群的微生物群进行比较,可以揭示长期共同进化历史和本土宿主范围内微生物特化的影响,以及入侵后出现的新关联。我们为理解微生物关系如何影响入侵成功以及如何利用微生物来控制入侵宿主奠定了重要基础。