Massey Caroline, Nosker Maggie E, Gale Joseph, Scott Shayna, Walker Carson J, Cluff Aubrey, Wilcox Susan, Morrison Amanda, Gottfredson Morgan Sarah J, Beltz Jack, Schmidt Paul, Chaston John M
bioRxiv. 2024 May 3:2024.05.02.591907. doi: 10.1101/2024.05.02.591907.
The fruit fly is a model for understanding how hosts and their microbial partners interact as the host adapts to wild environments. These interactions are readily interrogated because of the low taxonomic and numeric complexity of the flies' bacterial communities. Previous work has established that host genotype, the environment, diet, and interspecies microbial interactions can all influence host fitness and microbiota composition, but the specific processes and characters mediating these processes are incompletely understood. Here, we compared the variation in microbiota composition between wild-derived fly populations when flies could choose between the microorganisms in their diets and when flies were reared under environmental perturbation (different humidities). We also compared the colonization of the resident and transient microorganisms. We show that the ability to choose between microorganisms in the diet and the environmental condition of the flies can influence the relative abundance of the microbiota. There were also key differences in the abundances of the resident and transient microbiota. However, the microbiota only differed between populations when the flies were reared at humidities at or above 50% relative humidity. We also show that elevated humidity determined the penetrance of a gradient in host genetic selection on the microbiota that is associated with the latitude the flies were collected from. Finally, we show that the treatment-dependent variation in microbiota composition is associated with variation in host stress survival. Together, these findings emphasize that host genetic selection on the microbiota composition of a model animal host can be patterned with the source geography, and that such variation has the potential to influence their survival in the wild.
The fruit fly is a model for understanding how hosts and their microbial partners interact as hosts adapt in wild environments. Our understanding of what causes geographic variation in the fruit fly microbiota remains incomplete. Previous work has shown that the microbiota has relatively low numerical and taxonomic complexity. Variation in the fly microbiota composition can be attributed to environmental characters and host genetic variation, and variation in microbiota composition can be patterned with the source location of the flies. In this work we explored three possible causes of patterned variation in microbiota composition. We show that host feeding choices, the host niche colonized by the bacteria, and a single environmental character can all contribute to variation in microbiota composition. We also show that penetrance of latitudinally-patterned host genetic selection is only observed at elevated humidities. Together, these results identify several factors that influence microbiota composition in wild fly genotypes and emphasize the interplay between environmental and host genetic factors in determining the microbiota composition of these model hosts.
果蝇是一种用于理解宿主及其微生物伙伴在宿主适应野生环境过程中如何相互作用的模型。由于果蝇细菌群落的分类学和数量复杂性较低,这些相互作用很容易被研究。先前的研究已经确定,宿主基因型、环境、饮食以及种间微生物相互作用都会影响宿主健康和微生物群组成,但介导这些过程的具体过程和特征尚未完全了解。在这里,我们比较了野生果蝇群体在可以选择饮食中的微生物时以及在环境扰动(不同湿度)下饲养时微生物群组成的差异。我们还比较了常驻微生物和短暂微生物的定殖情况。我们发现,在饮食中选择微生物的能力以及果蝇的环境条件会影响微生物群相对丰度。常驻微生物群和短暂微生物群的丰度也存在关键差异。然而,只有当果蝇在相对湿度50%或以上的湿度下饲养时,不同群体之间的微生物群才会有所不同。我们还表明,高湿度决定了宿主对微生物群的遗传选择梯度的外显率,该梯度与果蝇采集地的纬度相关。最后,我们表明,微生物群组成的处理依赖性变化与宿主应激存活的变化有关。总之,这些发现强调,模型动物宿主对微生物群组成的遗传选择可以与来源地理模式相关,并且这种变化有可能影响它们在野外的生存。
果蝇是一种用于理解宿主及其微生物伙伴在宿主适应野生环境过程中如何相互作用的模型。我们对果蝇微生物群地理变异的原因的理解仍然不完整。先前的研究表明,果蝇微生物群的数量和分类学复杂性相对较低。果蝇微生物群组成的变化可归因于环境特征和宿主遗传变异,并且微生物群组成的变化可以与果蝇的来源位置模式相关。在这项工作中,我们探讨了微生物群组成模式变异的三个可能原因。我们发现,宿主的摄食选择、细菌定殖的宿主生态位以及单一环境特征都可能导致微生物群组成的变化。我们还表明,只有在高湿度下才会观察到纬度模式的宿主遗传选择的外显率。总之,这些结果确定了几个影响野生果蝇基因型微生物群组成的因素,并强调了环境和宿主遗传因素在决定这些模型宿主微生物群组成方面的相互作用。