| Literature DB >> 33892813 |
Connie A Rojas1,2,3, Santiago Ramírez-Barahona4, Kay E Holekamp5,6,7, Kevin R Theis7,8.
Abstract
The gut microbiota is critical for host function. Among mammals, host phylogenetic relatedness and diet are strong drivers of gut microbiota structure, but one factor may be more influential than the other. Here, we used 16S rRNA gene sequencing to determine the relative contributions of host phylogeny and host diet in structuring the gut microbiotas of 11 herbivore species from 5 families living sympatrically in southwest Kenya. Herbivore species were classified as grazers, browsers, or mixed-feeders and dietary data (% C4 grasses in diet) were compiled from previously published sources. We found that herbivore gut microbiotas were highly species-specific, and that host taxonomy accounted for more variation in the gut microbiota (30%) than did host dietary guild (10%) or sample month (8%). Overall, similarity in the gut microbiota increased with host phylogenetic relatedness (r = 0.74) across the 11 species of herbivores, but among 7 closely related Bovid species, dietary %C4 grass values more strongly predicted gut microbiota structure (r = 0.64). Additionally, within bovids, host dietary guild explained more of the variation in the gut microbiota (17%) than did host species (12%). Lastly, while we found that the gut microbiotas of herbivores residing in southwest Kenya converge with those of distinct populations of conspecifics from central Kenya, fine-scale differences in the abundances of bacterial amplicon sequence variants (ASVs) between individuals from the two regions were also observed. Overall, our findings suggest that host phylogeny and taxonomy strongly structure the gut microbiota across broad host taxonomic scales, but these gut microbiotas can be further modified by host ecology (i.e., diet, geography), especially among closely related host species.Entities:
Keywords: 16S rRNA gene sequencing; African mammals; Diet; Herbivore gut microbiome; Host ecology; Host geography; Phylosymbiosis
Year: 2021 PMID: 33892813 PMCID: PMC8063394 DOI: 10.1186/s42523-021-00094-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Anim Microbiome ISSN: 2524-4671
List of host study species and their associated metadata
| Order | Family | Species (common name) | Dietary Guild | Total Samples (N) | Analyzed samples (N) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| African buffalo | grazer | 18 | 17 | ||
| Domestic cattle | grazer | 14 | 13 | ||
| Common eland | mixed feeder | 8 | 8 | ||
| Impala | mixed feeder | 20 | 20 | ||
| Kirk’s dik dik | browser | 37 | 31 | ||
| Thomson’s gazelle | mixed feeder | 14 | 14 | ||
| Topi | grazer | 19 | 19 | ||
| Masai giraffe | browser | 25 | 18 | ||
| Warthog | mixed feeder | 9 | 8 | ||
| Plains zebra | grazer | 5 | 5 | ||
| African elephant | mixed feeder | 12 | 12 |
Fig. 1African herbivore gut microbiotas exhibit patterns consistent with phylosymbiosis. a Phylogenetic tree of host species (left) obtained from pruning Upham’s et al. 2019 Mammalian supertree, compared against a dendogram (right) of gut microbiota similarity using hierarchical clustering. b Scatterplot of pairwise host divergence times (in millions of years) vs. gut microbiota similarity (Bray-Curtis distances) across all sampled herbivores (left) and within the single host family Bovidae (right). The plot on the left has a trendline representing the best fit line of a linear model regressing Bray-Curtis dissimilarity with host phylogenetic distance, which was added for plotting purposes. c PCoA plots constructed from Bray-Curtis dissimilarity matrices. Each point represents a sample and is color-coded by host family (left) or host dietary guild (right). Closeness of points indicates high community similarity. The percentage of variance accounted for by each principal-coordinate axis is shown in the axis labels. d PCoA plots constructed from Bray-Curtis dissimilarity matrices of bovid species only. Each point is color-coded by host species (left) or host dietary guild (right)
The relative contributions of host phylogenetic relatedness and diet in predicting gut microbiota similarity
| Phylogenetic Relatedness | Dietary Similarity (% C4 grasses) | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| R | Z stat | R | Z stat | ||||
| Bray-Curtis | 0.77 | 8.90 | 0.15 | 1.09 | 0.27 | ||
| Jaccard | 0.72 | 7.50 | 0.03 | 0.27 | 0.78 | ||
| Unifrac (weighted) | 0.76 | 8.51 | 0.10 | 0.73 | 0.46 | ||
| Unifrac (unweighted) | 0.71 | 7.47 | 0.02 | 0.152 | 0.87 | ||
| Bray-Curtis | 0.43 | 2.07 | 0.05 | 0.68 | 3.98 | ||
| Jaccard | 0.35 | 1.63 | 0.12 | 0.69 | 4.05 | ||
| Unifrac (weighted) | 0.31 | 1.41 | 0.17 | 0.57 | 2.94 | ||
| Unifrac (unweighted) | 0.29 | 1.29 | 0.21 | 0.63 | 3.52 | ||
Shown are the rho, test statistic, and p-values associated with partial correlation coefficient tests that evaluated the correlation between 2 variables (e.g. gut microbiome similarity and phylogenetic relatedness, while controlling for a third (e.g. dietary similarity). The tests were conducted on 4 types of gut microbiome distance metrics, and significant p-values are bolded
Host taxonomy and dietary guild shape the gut microbiotas of African herbivores
| Analysis | Host factors | Bray-Curtis | Jaccard | Weighted Unifrac | Unweighted Unifrac |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Host family | 22.34, | 20.62, | 25.90, | 24.29, | |
| Host dietary guild | 11.20, | 10.17, | 10.04, | 10.30, | |
| sample month | 7.39, | 6.78, | 9.90, | 7.68, | |
| Host dietary guild | 18.26, | 15.91, | 18.35, | 16.77, | |
| Host species | 15.16, | 13.38, | 8.23, | 12.16, | |
| sample month | 7.56, | 7.03, | 7.59, | 7.17, |
Shown are the R2 values (% variance explained) and p-values for PERMANOVA tests (y ~ sample month + host dietary guild + host taxonomy) based on 4 types of distance matrices. Bray-Curtis and Weighted Unifrac distance matrices take into consideration the proportions of bacterial taxa, while Jaccard and unweighted Unifrac take into account only their presence or absence. Both Unifrac distances account for phylogenetic relatedness among bacterial types. Significant p-values (α = 0.05) are bolded
Fig. 2Gut microbiota composition of African herbivores. a Stacked bar plots showing the relative frequency of 16S rRNA gene sequences assigned to each bacterial family (or order, if a family-level classification could not be assigned) across samples. Samples are grouped by host species, and each color represents a bacterial family. b Bacterial families significantly associated with particular herbivore families as determined by indicator species analysis. Differences in these taxa abundances can explain differences in the microbiota among the different groups. Note how no bacterial taxa were associated with Bovid hosts. c Bacterial families significantly associated with herbivores from different dietary guilds as determined by indicator species analysis
Microbiota richness, evenness, and phylogenetic diversity vary with host taxonomy and dietary guild
| Model | Factor | Chao 1 Richness | Shannon diversity | Phylogenetic diversity |
|---|---|---|---|---|
Across all study sp. (11 sp.) ( | Host family | χ2 = 53.58, | χ2 = 33.45 | χ2 = 18.31 |
| Host dietary guild | χ2 = 79.03 | χ2 = 73.72 | χ2 = 52.61 | |
Within bovids (7 sp.) ( | Host species | χ2 = 57.03 | χ2 = 10.81 | χ2 = 50.53 |
| Host dietary guild | χ2 = 19.55 | χ2 = 33.91 | χ2 = 10.67 |
Shown are the likelihood ratio χ2 test statistics obtained for linear mixed effects models specifying host dietary guild and host family as predictor variables, sample date as a random effect, and an alpha-diversity metric as a dependent variable. A similar model restricted to bovids was also constructed; it specified host species instead of host family. Significant p-values (α = 0.05) are bolded
Fig. 3Host taxonomy and dietary guild are associated with gut microbiota diversity in African herbivores. a Boxplots of microbiota evenness (Shannon diversity) among host families and dietary guilds across all studied herbivores, and b) among host species and dietary guilds within the family Bovidae. Boxes that do not share any letters represent statistically significant comparisons; see Tables S3-S6 for all post-hoc comparisons. Thicker dots represent outlier values
Fig. 4The gut microbiotas of conspecific African herbivores broadly converge, but also exhibit differences in their ASV abundances. We compared the gut microbiotas of eight species of herbivores residing in both the Masai Mara (this study) and Laikipia (Kartzinel et al. 2019) regions in Kenya. a PCoA plot constructed from Bray-Curtis dissimilarity matrices. Each point represents a sample and is color-coded by host species; shape shading indicates geographic region (empty circles: Masai Mara, filled circles: Laikipia). b Heatmap of the 32 most abundant bacterial ASVs residing in the gut microbiotas of Masai Mara and Laikipia herbivores. Samples are grouped by host species, and are color-coded by host geographic region. c ASVs enriched in Masai Mara or Laikipia herbivores as determined by LEfSe. Each dot represents a unique ASV and is color-coded by host geographic region. A total of 212 ASVs are displayed (those with LDA > 3.2) and their family or genus level classification are on the x-axis