Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, USA.
Project Chimps, Blue Ridge, GA, USA.
Mol Ecol. 2021 Aug;30(15):3677-3687. doi: 10.1111/mec.15994. Epub 2021 Jun 13.
Humans and nonhuman primates (NHPs) harbor complex gut microbial communities that affect phenotypes and fitness. The gut microbiotas of wild NHPs reflect their hosts' phylogenetic histories and are compositionally distinct from those of humans, but in captivity the endogenous gut microbial lineages of NHPs can be lost or replaced by lineages found in humans. Despite its potential contributions to gastrointestinal dysfunction, this humanization of the gut microbiota has not been investigated systematically across captive NHP species. Here, we show through comparisons of well-sampled wild and captive populations of apes and monkeys that the fraction of the gut microbiota humanized by captivity varies significantly between NHP species but is remarkably reproducible between captive populations of the same NHP species. Conspecific captive populations displayed significantly greater than expected overlap in the sets of bacterial 16S rRNA gene variants that were differentially abundant between captivity and the wild. This overlap was evident even between captive populations residing on different continents but was never observed between heterospecific captive populations. In addition, we developed an approach incorporating human gut microbiota data to rank NHPs' gut microbial clades based on the propensity of their lineages to be lost or replaced in captivity by lineages found in humans. Relatively few microbial genera displayed reproducible degrees of humanization in different captive host species, but most microbial genera were reproducibly humanized or retained from the wild in conspecific pairs of captive populations. These results demonstrate that the gut microbiotas of captive NHPs display predictable, host-species specific responses to captivity.
人类和非人类灵长类动物(NHPs)体内携带着复杂的肠道微生物群落,这些微生物群落影响着表型和适应能力。野生 NHPs 的肠道微生物群落反映了它们宿主的进化历史,与人类的肠道微生物群落在组成上有明显的区别,但在圈养环境中,NHPs 的内源性肠道微生物谱系可能会丢失或被人类的肠道微生物谱系所取代。尽管这种肠道微生物群的人类化可能会导致胃肠道功能障碍,但这种现象在圈养 NHPs 物种中并没有被系统地研究过。在这里,我们通过对经过充分采样的野生和圈养的猿猴类和猴类进行比较,表明圈养对肠道微生物群的人类化程度在不同的 NHP 物种之间存在显著差异,但在同一 NHP 物种的圈养种群之间具有惊人的可重复性。同一种 NHP 的圈养种群之间,在被圈养和在野外时差异丰富的细菌 16S rRNA 基因变异体的集合中,表现出显著高于预期的重叠。即使是在不同大陆的圈养种群之间,也观察到了这种重叠,但在不同种的圈养种群之间从未观察到这种重叠。此外,我们开发了一种方法,该方法结合了人类肠道微生物组数据,根据其谱系在圈养环境中被人类肠道微生物谱系取代或丢失的倾向,对 NHPs 的肠道微生物类群进行排序。在不同的圈养宿主物种中,只有相对较少的微生物属表现出可重复的人类化程度,但在同一种 NHP 的圈养种群中,大多数微生物属都能从野外被重复地人类化或保留下来。这些结果表明,圈养 NHPs 的肠道微生物群对圈养环境表现出可预测的、宿主物种特异性的反应。