Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, University of Connecticut, Storrs, Connecticut, USA.
Kewalo Marine Laboratory, Pacific Biosciences Research Center, University of Hawaii at Manoa, Honolulu, Hawaii, USA.
mBio. 2023 Feb 28;14(1):e0213122. doi: 10.1128/mbio.02131-22. Epub 2023 Jan 19.
Developmental processes in animals are influenced by colonization and/or signaling from microbial symbionts. Here, we show that bacteria from the environment are linked to development of a symbiotic organ that houses a bacterial consortium in female Hawaiian bobtail squid, . In addition to the well-characterized light organ association with the bioluminescent bacterium Vibrio fischeri, female house a simple bacterial community in a reproductive organ, the accessory nidamental gland (ANG). In order to understand the influences of bacteria on ANG development, squid were raised in the laboratory under conditions where exposure to environmental microorganisms was experimentally manipulated. Under conditions where hosts were exposed to depleted environmental bacteria, ANGs were completely absent or stunted, a result independent of the presence of the light organ symbiont V. fischeri. When squid were raised in the laboratory with substrate from the host's natural environment containing the native microbiota, normal ANG development was observed, and the bacterial communities were similar to wild-caught animals. Analysis of the bacterial communities from ANGs and substrates of wild-caught and laboratory-raised animals suggests that certain bacterial groups, namely, the , are linked to ANG development. The ANG community composition was also experimentally manipulated. Squid raised with natural substrate supplemented with a specific ANG bacterial strain, sp. JC1, had high proportions of this strain in the ANG, suggesting that once ANG development is initiated, specific strains can be introduced and subsequently colonize the organ. Overall, these data suggest that environmental bacteria are required for development of the ANG in . Microbiota have profound effects on animal and plant development. Hosts raised axenically or without symbionts often suffer negative outcomes resulting in developmental defects or reduced organ function. Using defined experimental conditions, we demonstrate that environmental bacteria are required for the formation of a female-specific symbiotic organ in the Hawaiian bobtail squid, . Although nascent tissues from this organ that are involved with bacterial recruitment formed initially, the mature organ failed to develop and was absent or severely reduced in sexually mature animals that were not exposed to microbiota from the host's natural environment. This is the first example of complete organ development relying on exposure to symbiotic bacteria in an animal host. This study broadens the use of as a model organism for studying the influence of beneficial bacteria on animal development.
动物的发育过程受到微生物共生体的定植和/或信号的影响。在这里,我们表明,环境中的细菌与一种共生器官的发育有关,这种共生器官容纳了夏威夷短尾乌贼中的细菌联合体。除了与发光细菌 Vibrio fischeri 相关的特征明显的光器官外,雌性 还在生殖器官附件卵黄腺(ANG)中拥有一个简单的细菌群落。为了了解细菌对 ANG 发育的影响,鱿鱼在实验室中饲养,实验操纵了它们暴露于环境微生物的条件。在宿主暴露于耗尽的环境细菌的条件下,ANG 完全不存在或发育不良,这一结果与光器官共生体 V. fischeri 的存在无关。当鱿鱼在实验室中用含有天然微生物群的宿主天然环境的基质饲养时,观察到正常的 ANG 发育,并且细菌群落与野生捕获的动物相似。对野生捕获和实验室饲养动物的 ANG 和基质中的细菌群落进行分析表明,某些细菌群,即 ,与 ANG 发育有关。ANG 群落组成也进行了实验操作。用天然基质饲养并补充特定 ANG 细菌株 sp. JC1 的鱿鱼,在 ANG 中有高比例的该菌株,这表明一旦 ANG 发育开始,就可以引入特定菌株并随后定植器官。总体而言,这些数据表明,环境细菌是 形成 ANG 所必需的。 微生物组对动植物的发育有深远的影响。在没有共生体的情况下饲养的宿主通常会产生负面影响,导致发育缺陷或器官功能降低。使用定义明确的实验条件,我们证明环境细菌是夏威夷短尾乌贼雌性特异性共生器官形成所必需的。尽管最初形成了与细菌招募有关的该器官的新生组织,但在未暴露于宿主天然环境中的微生物群的性成熟动物中,成熟器官未能发育,并且不存在或严重减少。这是第一个完全依赖于动物宿主共生细菌暴露来发育的器官的例子。这项研究拓宽了利用 作为研究有益细菌对动物发育影响的模型生物的应用。