Literature DB >> 33408228

Disentangling the Relative Roles of Vertical Transmission, Subsequent Colonizations, and Diet on Cockroach Microbiome Assembly.

Justinn Renelies-Hamilton1, Kristjan Germer1, David Sillam-Dussès2, Kasun H Bodawatta3, Michael Poulsen4.   

Abstract

A multitude of factors affect the assemblies of complex microbial communities associated with animal hosts, with implications for community flexibility, resilience, and long-term stability; however, their relative effects have rarely been deduced. Here, we use a tractable lab model to quantify the relative and combined effects of parental transmission (egg case microbiome present/reduced), gut inocula (cockroach versus termite gut provisioned), and varying diets (matched or unmatched with gut inoculum source) on gut microbiota structure of hatchlings of the omnivorous cockroach Shelfordella lateralis using 16S rRNA gene (rDNA) amplicon sequencing. We show that the presence of a preexisting bacterial community via vertical transmission of microbes on egg cases reduces subsequent microbial invasion, suggesting priority effects that allow initial colonizers to take a strong hold and which stabilize the microbiome. However, subsequent inoculation sources more strongly affect ultimate community composition and their ecological networks, with distinct host-taxon-of-origin effects on which bacteria establish. While this is so, communities respond flexibly to specific diets in ways that consequently impact predicted community functions. In conclusion, our findings suggest that inoculations drive communities toward different stable states depending on colonization and extinction events, through ecological host-microbe relations and interactions with other gut bacteria, while diet in parallel shapes the functional capabilities of these microbiomes. These effects may lead to consistent microbial communities that maximize the extended phenotype that the microbiota provides the host, particularly if microbes spend most of their lives in host-associated environments.IMPORTANCE When host fitness is dependent on gut microbiota, microbial community flexibility and reproducibility enhance host fitness by allowing fine-tuned environmental tracking and sufficient stability for host traits to evolve. Our findings lend support to the importance of vertically transmitted early-life microbiota as stabilizers, through interactions with potential colonizers, which may contribute to ensuring that the microbiota aligns within host fitness-enhancing parameters. Subsequent colonizations are driven by microbial composition of the sources available, and we confirm that host-taxon-of-origin affects stable subsequent communities, while communities at the same time retain sufficient flexibility to shift in response to available diets. Microbiome structure is thus the result of the relative impact and combined effects of inocula and fluctuations driven by environment-specific microbial sources and digestive needs. These affect short-term community structure on an ecological time scale but could ultimately shape host species specificities in microbiomes across evolutionary time, if environmental conditions prevail.
Copyright © 2021 Renelies-Hamilton et al.

Entities:  

Keywords:  host specificity; microbial inocula; microbiome stability; network analysis; symbiosis; transmission

Year:  2021        PMID: 33408228      PMCID: PMC7845597          DOI: 10.1128/mSphere.01023-20

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  mSphere        ISSN: 2379-5042            Impact factor:   4.389


  76 in total

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4.  Dirichlet multinomial mixtures: generative models for microbial metagenomics.

Authors:  Ian Holmes; Keith Harris; Christopher Quince
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2012-02-03       Impact factor: 3.240

5.  Pyrotag sequencing of the gut microbiota of the cockroach Shelfordella lateralis reveals a highly dynamic core but only limited effects of diet on community structure.

Authors:  Christine Schauer; Claire Thompson; Andreas Brune
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2014-01-15       Impact factor: 3.240

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Review 9.  From hairballs to hypotheses-biological insights from microbial networks.

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10.  Unraveling Assemblage, Functions and Stability of the Gut Microbiota of Blattella germanica by Antibiotic Treatment.

Authors:  Rebeca Domínguez-Santos; Ana Elena Pérez-Cobas; Alejandro Artacho; José A Castro; Irene Talón; Andrés Moya; Carlos García-Ferris; Amparo Latorre
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  7 in total

1.  Differences in Gut Microbiome Composition Between Sympatric Wild and Allopatric Laboratory Populations of Omnivorous Cockroaches.

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2.  Specific gut bacterial responses to natural diets of tropical birds.

Authors:  Kasun H Bodawatta; Irena Klečková; Jan Klečka; Kateřina Pužejová; Bonny Koane; Michael Poulsen; Knud A Jønsson; Katerina Sam
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2022-01-13       Impact factor: 4.379

3.  Transcriptome Responses to Defined Insecticide Selection Pressures in the German Cockroach (Blattella germanica L.).

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4.  The early life microbiota mediates maternal effects on offspring growth in a nonhuman primate.

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Review 5.  Of Cockroaches and Symbionts: Recent Advances in the Characterization of the Relationship between Blattella germanica and Its Dual Symbiotic System.

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