Marine Biology Research Division, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, California, USA.
Flathead Lake Biological Station, University of Montanagrid.253613.0, Polson, Montana, USA.
mSphere. 2022 Apr 27;7(2):e0003222. doi: 10.1128/msphere.00032-22. Epub 2022 Mar 21.
Hadal snailfishes are the deepest-living fishes in the ocean, inhabiting trenches from depths of ∼6,000 to 8,000 m. While the microbial communities in trench environments have begun to be characterized, the microbes associated with hadal megafauna remain relatively unknown. Here, we describe the gut microbiomes of two hadal snailfishes, (Mariana Trench) and (Kermadec Trench), using 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing. We contextualize these microbiomes with comparisons to the abyssal macrourid and the continental shelf-dwelling snailfish . The microbial communities of the hadal snailfishes were distinct from their shallower counterparts and were dominated by the same sequences related to the and . These shared taxa indicate that symbiont lineages have remained similar to the ancestral symbiont since their geographic separation or that they are dispersed between geographically distant trenches and subsequently colonize specific hosts. The abyssal and hadal fishes contained sequences related to known, cultured piezophiles, microbes that grow optimally under high hydrostatic pressure, including , , and . These taxa are adept at colonizing nutrient-rich environments present in the deep ocean, such as on particles and in the guts of hosts, and we hypothesize they could make a dietary contribution to deep-sea fishes by degrading chitin and producing fatty acids. We characterize the gut microbiota within some of the deepest fishes to provide new insight into the diversity and distribution of host-associated microbial taxa and the potential of these animals, and the microbes they harbor, for understanding adaptation to deep-sea habitats. Hadal trenches, characterized by high hydrostatic pressures and low temperatures, are one of the most extreme environments on our planet. By examining the microbiome of abyssal and hadal fishes, we provide insight into the diversity and distribution of host-associated life at great depth. Our findings show that there are similar microbial populations in fishes geographically separated by thousands of miles, reflecting strong selection for specific microbial lineages. Only a few psychropiezophilic taxa, which do not reflect the diversity of microbial life at great depth, have been successfully isolated in the laboratory. Our examination of deep-sea fish microbiomes shows that typical high-pressure culturing methodologies, which have largely remained unchanged since the pioneering work of Claude ZoBell in the 1950s, may simulate the chemical environment found in animal guts and helps explain why the same deep-sea genera are consistently isolated.
深渊贻贝鱼是海洋中栖息最深的鱼类,生活在深度约 6000 至 8000 米的海沟中。虽然海沟环境中的微生物群落已经开始被描述,但与深渊巨型动物相关的微生物仍然知之甚少。在这里,我们使用 16S rRNA 基因扩增子测序描述了两种深渊贻贝鱼 (马里亚纳海沟)和 (克马德克海沟)的肠道微生物组。我们将这些微生物组与深渊毛颚鱼和大陆架栖息的贻贝鱼进行了比较。深渊贻贝鱼的微生物群落与较浅的鱼类不同,主要由与 和 相关的相同序列组成。这些共享的分类群表明,共生谱系自地理分离以来一直与祖先共生体相似,或者它们在地理上相隔甚远的海沟之间传播,并随后定植于特定的宿主。深渊和深海鱼类中存在与已知的、培养的嗜压微生物相关的序列,这些微生物在高静压下生长最佳,包括 、 、 和 。这些类群擅长在深海中富含营养的环境中定殖,如颗粒上和宿主的肠道中,我们假设它们可以通过降解几丁质和产生脂肪酸来为深海鱼类提供饮食贡献。我们描述了一些最深的鱼类的肠道微生物群,为宿主相关微生物分类群的多样性和分布以及这些动物及其所携带的微生物对深海栖息地适应的潜力提供了新的见解。深渊海沟以高静水压力和低温为特征,是地球上最极端的环境之一。通过检查深渊和深海鱼类的微生物组,我们深入了解了在深海深处宿主相关生命的多样性和分布。我们的研究结果表明,在地理上相隔数千英里的鱼类中存在相似的微生物种群,这反映了对特定微生物谱系的强烈选择。只有少数嗜压微生物类群,它们不能反映深海微生物生命的多样性,已经在实验室中成功分离出来。我们对深海鱼类微生物组的研究表明,典型的高压培养方法学,自克劳德·佐贝尔(Claude ZoBell)在 20 世纪 50 年代开创先河以来,基本上没有改变,可能模拟了动物肠道中发现的化学环境,这有助于解释为什么相同的深海属总是被分离出来。