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具有不同食性生态的大洋性大型鲨鱼的微生物组结构

Microbiome structure in large pelagic sharks with distinct feeding ecologies.

作者信息

Pratte Zoe A, Perry Cameron, Dove Alistair D M, Hoopes Lisa A, Ritchie Kim B, Hueter Robert E, Fischer Chris, Newton Alisa L, Stewart Frank J

机构信息

Department of Microbiology & Cell Biology, Montanta State University, 621 Leon Johnson Hall, Bozeman, MT, 59717, USA.

Center for Microbial Dynamics and Infection, School of Biological Sciences, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA, USA.

出版信息

Anim Microbiome. 2022 Mar 4;4(1):17. doi: 10.1186/s42523-022-00168-x.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Sharks play essential roles in ocean food webs and human culture, but also face population declines worldwide due to human activity. The relationship between sharks and the microbes on and in the shark body is unclear, despite research on other animals showing the microbiome as intertwined with host physiology, immunity, and ecology. Research on shark-microbe interactions faces the significant challenge of sampling the largest and most elusive shark species. We leveraged a unique sampling infrastructure to compare the microbiomes of two apex predators, the white (Carcharodon carcharias) and tiger shark (Galeocerdo cuvier), to those of the filter-feeding whale shark (Rhincodon typus), allowing us to explore the effects of feeding mode on intestinal microbiome diversity and metabolic function, and environmental exposure on the diversity of microbes external to the body (on the skin, gill).

RESULTS

The fecal microbiomes of white and whale sharks were highly similar in taxonomic and gene category composition despite differences in host feeding mode and diet. Fecal microbiomes from these species were also taxon-poor compared to those of many other vertebrates and were more similar to those of predatory teleost fishes and toothed whales than to those of filter-feeding baleen whales. In contrast, microbiomes of external body niches were taxon-rich and significantly influenced by diversity in the water column microbiome.

CONCLUSIONS

These results suggest complex roles for host identity, diet, and environmental exposure in structuring the shark microbiome and identify a small, but conserved, number of intestinal microbial taxa as potential contributors to shark physiology.

摘要

背景

鲨鱼在海洋食物网和人类文化中发挥着重要作用,但由于人类活动,全球鲨鱼数量也在减少。尽管对其他动物的研究表明微生物群与宿主生理学、免疫力和生态学相互交织,但鲨鱼与其体表和体内微生物之间的关系尚不清楚。鲨鱼与微生物相互作用的研究面临着对最大且最难捉摸的鲨鱼物种进行采样的重大挑战。我们利用独特的采样基础设施,将两种顶级掠食者——大白鲨(噬人鲨)和虎鲨(居氏鼬鲨)的微生物群与滤食性鲸鲨(鲸鲨)的微生物群进行比较,从而能够探究摄食方式对肠道微生物群多样性和代谢功能的影响,以及环境暴露对体表(皮肤、鳃)微生物多样性的影响。

结果

尽管宿主摄食方式和饮食存在差异,但大白鲨和鲸鲨的粪便微生物群在分类和基因类别组成上高度相似。与许多其他脊椎动物相比,这些物种的粪便微生物群分类单元较少,并且与掠食性硬骨鱼类和齿鲸的粪便微生物群更为相似,而与滤食性须鲸的粪便微生物群不同。相比之下,体表生态位的微生物群分类单元丰富,并且受到水柱微生物群多样性的显著影响。

结论

这些结果表明宿主身份、饮食和环境暴露在构建鲨鱼微生物群中具有复杂作用,并确定了一小部分但保守的肠道微生物分类单元作为鲨鱼生理学的潜在贡献者。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/7b43/8895868/6d696e9d8028/42523_2022_168_Fig1_HTML.jpg

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