Department of Agricultural, Food and Nutritional Science, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB, T6G 2E1, Canada.
Department of Infectious Diseases and Public Health, Jockey Club College of Veterinary Medicine and Life Sciences, City University of Hong Kong, Kowloon, Hong Kong SAR, China.
BMC Biol. 2023 Mar 13;21(1):53. doi: 10.1186/s12915-023-01541-1.
Gut microbes play crucial roles in the development and health of their animal hosts. However, the evolutionary relationships of gut microbes with vertebrate hosts, and the consequences that arise for the ecology and lifestyle of the microbes are still insufficiently understood. Specifically, the mechanisms by which strain-level diversity evolved, the degree by which lineages remain stably associated with hosts, and how their evolutionary history influences their ecological performance remain a critical gap in our understanding of vertebrate-microbe symbiosis.
This study presents the characterization of an extended collection of strains of Limosilactobacillus reuteri and closely related species from a wide variety of hosts by phylogenomic and comparative genomic analyses combined with colonization experiments in mice to gain insight into the long-term evolutionary relationship of a bacterial symbiont with vertebrates. The phylogenetic analysis of L. reuteri revealed early-branching lineages that primarily consist of isolates from rodents (four lineages) and birds (one lineage), while lineages dominated by strains from herbivores, humans, pigs, and primates arose more recently and were less host specific. Strains from rodent lineages, despite their phylogenetic divergence, showed tight clustering in gene-content-based analyses. These L. reuteri strains but not those ones from non-rodent lineages efficiently colonize the forestomach epithelium of germ-free mice. The findings support a long-term evolutionary relationships of L. reuteri lineages with rodents and a stable host switch to birds. Associations of L. reuteri with other host species are likely more dynamic and transient. Interestingly, human isolates of L. reuteri cluster phylogenetically closely with strains from domesticated animals, such as chickens and herbivores, suggesting zoonotic transmissions.
Overall, this study demonstrates that the evolutionary relationship of a vertebrate gut symbiont can be stable in particular hosts over time scales that allow major adaptations and specialization, but also emphasizes the diversity of symbiont lifestyles even within a single bacterial species. For L. reuteri, symbiont lifestyles ranged from autochthonous, likely based on vertical transmission and stably aligned to rodents and birds over evolutionary time, to allochthonous possibly reliant on zoonotic transmission in humans. Such information contributes to our ability to use these microbes in microbial-based therapeutics.
肠道微生物在其动物宿主的发育和健康中发挥着关键作用。然而,肠道微生物与脊椎动物宿主的进化关系,以及这些微生物对生态和生活方式产生的影响,还没有得到充分的理解。具体来说,菌株多样性的进化机制、谱系与宿主稳定相关的程度,以及它们的进化历史如何影响它们的生态表现,这些都是我们理解脊椎动物-微生物共生关系的一个关键空白。
本研究通过系统发育基因组学和比较基因组学分析,结合小鼠定植实验,对来自广泛宿主的雷氏乳杆菌及其密切相关物种的扩展菌株进行了描述,以深入了解一种细菌共生体与脊椎动物的长期进化关系。雷氏乳杆菌的系统发育分析显示,主要由啮齿动物(四个谱系)和鸟类(一个谱系)分离株组成的早期分支谱系,而由食草动物、人类、猪和灵长类动物的分离株组成的谱系则出现得较晚,宿主特异性也较低。尽管来自啮齿动物谱系的菌株在系统发育上存在分歧,但在基于基因内容的分析中,它们显示出紧密的聚类。这些雷氏乳杆菌菌株而非来自非啮齿动物谱系的菌株能够有效地定植无菌小鼠的前胃上皮。这些发现支持了雷氏乳杆菌谱系与啮齿动物的长期进化关系,并发生了稳定的宿主转换到鸟类。雷氏乳杆菌与其他宿主物种的关联可能更具动态性和短暂性。有趣的是,人类分离的雷氏乳杆菌与家禽和食草动物等家畜的菌株在系统发育上密切聚类,表明存在人畜共患传播。
总的来说,本研究表明,在允许主要适应和特化的时间尺度上,一种脊椎动物肠道共生体与特定宿主的进化关系可以是稳定的,但也强调了即使在单一细菌物种内,共生体生活方式的多样性。对于雷氏乳杆菌,共生体的生活方式从基于垂直传播的本地种,可能与啮齿动物和鸟类在进化时间上稳定相关,到依赖于人类人畜共患传播的外来种,可能存在差异。这些信息有助于我们利用这些微生物进行基于微生物的治疗。