| Literature DB >> 28386252 |
Fan Zhang1, Maureen Berg2, Katja Dierking3, Marie-Anne Félix4, Michael Shapira2, Buck S Samuel1, Hinrich Schulenburg3.
Abstract
The nematode Caenorhabditis elegans is used as a central model system across biological disciplines. Surprisingly, almost all research with this worm is performed in the absence of its native microbiome, possibly affecting generality of the obtained results. In fact, the C. elegans microbiome had been unknown until recently. This review brings together results from the first three studies on C. elegans microbiomes, all published in 2016. Meta-analysis of the data demonstrates a considerable conservation in the composition of the microbial communities, despite the distinct geographical sample origins, study approaches, labs involved and perturbations during worm processing. The C. elegans microbiome is enriched and in some cases selective for distinct phylotypes compared to corresponding substrate samples (e.g., rotting fruits, decomposing plant matter, and compost soil). The dominant bacterial groups include several Gammaproteobacteria (Enterobacteriaceae, Pseudomonaceae, and Xanthomonodaceae) and Bacteroidetes (Sphingobacteriaceae, Weeksellaceae, Flavobacteriaceae). They are consistently joined by several rare putative keystone taxa like Acetobacteriaceae. The bacteria are able to enhance growth of nematode populations, as well as resistance to biotic and abiotic stressors, including high/low temperatures, osmotic stress, and pathogenic bacteria and fungi. The associated microbes thus appear to display a variety of effects beneficial for the worm. The characteristics of these effects, their relevance for C. elegans fitness, the presence of specific co-adaptations between microbiome members and the worm, and the molecular underpinnings of microbiome-host interactions represent promising areas of future research, for which the advantages of C. elegans as an experimental system should prove of particular value.Entities:
Keywords: Caenorhabditis elegans; Enterobacter; Gluconobacter; Ochrobactrum; Pseudomonas; meta-analysis; microbiome; microbiota
Year: 2017 PMID: 28386252 PMCID: PMC5362939 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2017.00485
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
Overview of the first three systematic analyses of the .
| Study approach | Characterization of the microbiome of wild | Characterization of the microbiome of | Characterization of the microbiome of |
| Wild isolates | N/A | N2 | |
| Substrates | Apples, compost, vector invertebrates, stems | Apples, orange, cactus fruit, snail, black bryony stems | Soil composted with different produce (harboring complex microbiota) |
| Sampling location | Germany, France, Portugal | France, Spain | USA (soil isolation) |
| Method of analysis | Deep sequencing of 16S rDNA V4 region | Deep sequencing of 16S rDNA V4 region | Deep sequencing of 16S rDNA V4 region |
| Main taxa identified | |||
| Functional evaluation (effect of microbiome on life history traits) | Population growth on 24 individual bacterial isolates and on 14-taxa community under stress (high temperature, low/high osmolarity). Pathogen resistance. | Growth rates and induction of stress and immune reporters on 565 individual bacterial isolates from worm gut and/or substrates | N/A |
Only C. elegans strains for which the microbiome was characterized.
Non-exhaustive list of only some of the taxa.
Figure 1Composite micrographs of the . (A) Composite micrograph of the mouth region of C. elegans, and (B) of the middle part of the worm (anterior is to the left in both cases). Nematodes were raised on an experimental microbiome based on 14 abundant bacterial taxa, followed by microscopic analysis (Dirksen et al., 2016). Bacteria are stained in red with a eubacterial FISH probe and are observed as small dots throughout the entire gut. Worm nuclei are stained in blue with DAPI. The picture in (A) is taken from Dirksen et al. (2016), while that in (B) is new, courtesy of Philipp Dirksen from the Schulenburg lab.
Figure 2Cross-study comparison of . (A) Principle coordinate analyses based on unweighted UniFrac distances shows distinct clustering of C. elegans (filled) from rotting fruit or compost substrates (open) regardless of the study of origin. A three-dimensional representation of the results is provided in Supplementary Video 1. The characteristics of the included samples is presented in Supplementary Table 1, while the identified OTUs and their abundances are given in Supplementary Table 2. All microcosm data sets (given in green) are from Berg et al. (2016a). All natural and lab enriched worm data sets (given in filled purple and magenta symbols) are from Dirksen et al. (2016). The substrate data sets for rotting stem are exclusively from Samuel et al. (2016), while those for vector and rotting fruits include data from both Dirksen et al. (2016) and Samuel et al. (2016), and those for compost are exclusively from Dirksen et al. (2016). C. elegans microbiotas are generally less diverse than substrates as assessed by Shannon alpha diversity indices (B), and exhibit more similar composition within each worm group than to substrates or between substrates (C). Non-parametric p-values ≤0.002 are noted: a, vs. substrates; b, vs. soil microcosm; c, vs. worm group.
Figure 3Identification of a core microbiome of . (A) Scatterplot of OTU-level mean relative abundance and commonality across all 62 C. elegans microbiomes. Inset, Venn diagram of the shared OTUs from each of the groups of microbiotas. (B) Comparison of mean relative abundance in all C. elegans and 119 substrate samples. The colors of circles in (A,B) indicate the OTUs from distinct bacterial phyla, while circle size their abundance, as highlighted in the legend on the far right. (C) Heatmap of 14 bacterial families that are present in 100% of the natural worm microbiomes showing abundance across samples (in %). Red boxes highlight those that are abundant also in lab-enriched and microcosm microbiotas. The colors of the vertical column on the left of the heatmap are the same as in (A,B) and indicate the different bacterial phyla. A more detailed heatmap, which additionally includes all substrate samples, is provided as a Supplementary Figure 1. A list of the identified OTUs and their abundances in C. elegans and substrates is provided as a Supplementary Table 2.