| Literature DB >> 35402093 |
Zihao Zhou1,2,3, Hongying Wu3, Dinghong Li3, Wenlong Zeng3, Jinlong Huang1,2,3,4, Zhengjun Wu1,2,3.
Abstract
Background: Gut microbiota play a critical role in nutrition absorption and environmental adaptation and can affect the biological characteristics of host animals. The invasive golden apple snail (Pomacea canaliculata) and native Chinese mud snail (Cipangopaludina chinensis) are two sympatric freshwater snails with similar ecological niche in southern China. However, gut microbiota comparison of interspecies remains unclear. Comparing the difference of gut microbiota between the invasive snail P. canaliculata and native snail C. chinensis could provide new insight into the invasion mechanism of P.canaliculata at the microbial level.Entities:
Keywords: 16S rRNA gene; Cipangopaludina chinensis; Gut microbiota; High-throughput sequencing; Invasion species; Pomacea canaliculata; Snail
Year: 2022 PMID: 35402093 PMCID: PMC8992660 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.13245
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Figure 1Alpha diversity index summary.
Chao 1 and Observed species indexes represent community richness; Shannon and Simpson represent diversity; Faith’s PD represent the diversity of evolution; Pielou’s evenness represent evenness; Good’s coverage represent coverage. * P < 0.05 represent significant level.
Figure 2NMDS and ANOSIM analysis based on (A, C) Bray–Curtis and (B, D) weighted UniFrac distances of gut microbiota on OTU level.
The NMDS ordination revealed a significant difference based on Bray–Curtis (P = 0.034) and on weighted UniFrac distances (P = 0.031) between PC and CC groups. The ANOSIM revealed a significant difference based on Bray–Curtis (P = 0.027) and on weighted UniFrac distances (P = 0.03) between PC and CC groups. Part of the dots have overlapped (A and B).
Figure 3Relative abundance of top 10 OTU’s for P. canaliculata (PC) and C. chinensis (CC) at the phylum level.
Figure 4Relative abundance of top 10 OTU’s for P. canaliculata (PC) and C. chinensis (CC) at the genus level.
Figure 5Gut microbiota predictive metabolic functions from KEGG database in all samples.
The color-bar indicates gene function (level 1). Detailed descriptions are shown on the left side (level 2). The lines at the top of the figure have shown the KEGG level as well.