| Literature DB >> 27516760 |
Kevin D Kohl1, M Denise Dearing2.
Abstract
The microbial communities inhabiting the alimentary tracts of mammals, particularly those of herbivores, are estimated to be one of the densest microbial reservoirs on Earth. The significance of these gut microbes in influencing the physiology, ecology and evolution of their hosts is only beginning to be realized. To understand the microbiome of herbivores with a focus on nutritional ecology, while evaluating the roles of host evolution and environment in sculpting microbial diversity, we have developed an experimental system consisting of the microbial communities of several species of herbivorous woodrats (genus Neotoma) that naturally feed on a variety of dietary toxins. We designed this system to investigate the long-standing, but experimentally neglected hypothesis that ingestion of toxic diets by herbivores is facilitated by the gut microbiota. Like several other rodent species, the woodrat stomach has a sacculated, non-gastric foregut portion. We have documented a dense and diverse community of microbes in the woodrat foregut, with several genera potentially capable of degrading dietary toxins and/or playing a role in stimulating hepatic detoxification enzymes of the host. The biodiversity of these gut microbes appears to be a function of host evolution, ecological experience and diet, such that dietary toxins increase microbial diversity in hosts with experience with these toxins while novel toxins depress microbial diversity. These microbial communities are critical to the ingestion of a toxic diet as reducing the microbial community with antibiotics impairs the host's ability to feed on dietary toxins. Furthermore, the detoxification capacity of gut microbes can be transferred from Neotoma both intra and interspecifically to naïve animals that lack ecological and evolutionary history with these toxins. In addition to advancing our knowledge of complex host-microbes interactions, this system holds promise for identifying microbes that could be useful in the treatment of diseases in humans and domestic animals.Entities:
Keywords: herbivory; host–microbe interactions; mammal; plant secondary compounds; plant–animal interactions
Year: 2016 PMID: 27516760 PMCID: PMC4963388 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2016.01165
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
Details of dietary specialization in various woodrat species.
| Woodrat Species | Location | Diet Breadth | Plant Species | Primary Class of Toxin | Reference for Woodrat Diet | Reference for Plant Chemistry |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Coconino County, Arizona | Specialist | One-seeded juniper ( | Terpenes | |||
| Atlin, British Columbia | Generalist | Arctic lupine ( | Alkaloids | |||
| Lassen County, California | Specialist | Incense cedar ( | Terpenes | |||
| Orange County, California | Specialist | Live oak ( | Phenolics | |||
| Orange County, California | Generalist | Cactus ( | Oxalate | |||
| Washington County, Utah | Specialist | Creosote ( | Phenolics | |||
| Tooele County, Utah | Specialist | Utah juniper ( | Terpenes | |||
| Death Valley, California | Specialist | Honey mesquite ( | Alkaloids | |||
| Coconino County, Arizona | Specialist | Mormon tea ( | Alkaloids | |||
| Grand County, Utah | Specialist | Cactus ( | Oxalate |
Summary of evidence for detoxifying microbes in the woodrat gut.
| Microbial taxa | Woodrat species | Method of detection | Class of PSC that taxa is capable of degrading | Putative or demonstrated PSC metabolism in woodrats? | Citation for detection | Citation for microbial degradation ability (for putative only) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 16S rRNA sequencing | Phenolics | Putative | ||||
| 16S rRNA sequencing | Phenolics | Putative | ||||
| 16S rRNA sequencing | Oxalate | Putative | ||||
| Culture techniques | Phenolics (tannins) | Demonstrated | ||||
| Culture techniques | Phenolics (tannins) | Demonstrated | ||||
| Culture techniques | Phenolics (tannins) | Demonstrated | ||||
| Culture techniques | Oxalate | Demonstrated | ||||
| Culture techniques | Oxalate | Demonstrated | ||||
| Culture techniques | Oxalate | Demonstrated |