Department of Plant and Wildlife Sciences, Brigham Young Universitygrid.253294.b, Provo, Utah, USA.
Microbiol Spectr. 2021 Oct 31;9(2):e0003421. doi: 10.1128/Spectrum.00034-21. Epub 2021 Sep 29.
Associated microorganisms ("microbiota") play a central role in determining many animals' survival and reproduction characteristics. The impact of these microbial influences on an animal's fitness, or population growth, in a given environment has not been defined as clearly. We focused on microbiota-dependent host fitness by measuring life span and fecundity in Drosophila melanogaster fruit flies reared individually with 14 different bacterial species. Consistent with previous observations, the different bacteria significantly influenced the timing of fly life span and fecundity. Using Leslie matrices, we show that fly fitness was lowest when the microbes caused the flies to invest in life span over fecundity. Computational permutations showed that the positive fitness effect of investing in reproduction was reversed if fly survival over time was low, indicating that the observed fitness influences of the microbes could be context dependent. Finally, we showed that fly fitness is not influenced by bacterial genes that shape fly life span or fly triglyceride content, a trait that is related to fly survival and reproduction. Also, metagenome-wide association did not identify any microbial genes that were associated with variation in fly fitness. Therefore, the bacterial genetic basis for influencing fly fitness remains unknown. We conclude that bacteria influence a fly's reproductive timing more than total reproductive output and that (e.g., environmental) conditions that influence fly survival likely determine which bacteria benefit fly fitness. The ability of associated microorganisms ("microbiota") to influence animal life history traits has been recognized and investigated, especially in the past 2 decades. For many microbial communities, there is not always a clear definition of whether the microbiota or its members are beneficial, pathogenic, or relatively neutral to their hosts' fitness. In this study, we report the influence of individual members of the microbiota on Drosophila melanogaster fitness using Leslie matrices that combine the microbial influences on fly survival and reproduction into a single fitness measure. Our results are consistent with a previous report that, in the laboratory, acetic acid bacteria are more beneficial to the flies than many strains of lactic acid bacteria. We add to the previous finding by showing that this benefit depends on fly survival rate. Together, our work helps to show how the microbiota of a fly influences its laboratory fitness and how these effects may translate to a wild setting.
相关微生物(“微生物组”)在决定许多动物的生存和繁殖特征方面起着核心作用。这些微生物对动物在特定环境中的适应能力或种群增长的影响尚未明确界定。我们通过测量在单独饲养的 14 种不同细菌的条件下,黑腹果蝇的寿命和繁殖力,来关注依赖微生物的宿主适应性。与之前的观察结果一致,不同的细菌显著影响了果蝇寿命和繁殖力的时间安排。使用 Leslie 矩阵,我们表明,当微生物促使果蝇在寿命上投入而不是繁殖力时,果蝇的适应性最低。计算置换表明,如果随着时间的推移,果蝇的存活率较低,那么投资繁殖的正适应性效应就会逆转,这表明观察到的微生物对适应性的影响可能取决于环境背景。最后,我们表明,细菌不会影响塑造果蝇寿命或果蝇甘油三酯含量(与果蝇生存和繁殖有关的特征)的基因对果蝇适应性的影响。此外,宏基因组关联分析也没有发现任何与果蝇适应性变化相关的微生物基因。因此,影响果蝇适应性的细菌遗传基础仍然未知。我们的结论是,细菌对果蝇的繁殖时机的影响大于繁殖总输出,并且(例如,影响果蝇生存的)环境条件可能决定哪些细菌有利于果蝇的适应性。
过去 20 年来,人们已经认识到并研究了相关微生物(“微生物组”)影响动物生活史特征的能力,尤其是在过去 20 年。对于许多微生物群落,并不总是明确界定微生物组或其成员对其宿主适应性是有益、致病还是相对中立的。在这项研究中,我们使用 Leslie 矩阵报告了微生物组个别成员对黑腹果蝇适应性的影响,该矩阵将微生物对果蝇生存和繁殖的影响结合到一个单一的适应性衡量标准中。我们的结果与之前的一项研究结果一致,即在实验室中,乙酸细菌比许多乳酸细菌对果蝇更有益。我们通过表明这种益处取决于果蝇的存活率,对之前的发现进行了补充。总的来说,我们的工作有助于展示果蝇的微生物组如何影响其实验室适应性,以及这些影响如何转化为野外环境。