Microbial solutions to dietary stress: experimental evolution reveals host-microbiome interplay in Drosophila melanogaster.

IF 3.8 1区 生物学 Q1 BIOLOGY
Lucas Henry, Michael Fernandez, Andrew Webb, Julien Ayroles
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Can the microbiome serve as a reservoir of adaptive potential for hosts? To address this question, we leveraged approximately 150 generations of experimental evolution in Drosophila melanogaster on a stressful, high-sugar diet. We performed a fully reciprocal transplant experiment using the control and high-sugar bacteria. If the microbiome confers benefits to hosts, then transplant recipients should gain fitness benefits compared with controls. Interestingly, we found that such benefits exist, but their magnitude depends on evolutionary history-mismatches between fly evolution and microbiome reduced fecundity and potentially exerted fitness costs, especially in the stressful high-sugar diet. The dominant high-sugar bacteria (Acetobacter pasteurianus) uniquely encoded several genes to enable uric acid degradation, mediating the toxic effects of uric acid accumulation due to the high-sugar diet for flies. Our study demonstrates that host genotype × microbiome × environment interactions have substantial effects on host phenotype, highlighting how host evolution and ecological context together shape the adaptive potential of the microbiome.

饮食应激的微生物解决方案:实验进化揭示了黑腹果蝇宿主-微生物组的相互作用。
微生物组能否作为宿主适应潜能的储存库?为了解决这个问题,我们利用了大约150代黑腹果蝇在压力大、高糖饮食下的实验进化。我们用对照菌和高糖菌进行了完全互惠的移植实验。如果微生物组对宿主有益,那么与对照组相比,移植受体应该获得健康益处。有趣的是,我们发现这样的好处是存在的,但其程度取决于进化史——苍蝇进化和微生物组之间的不匹配降低了繁殖力,并潜在地施加了适应成本,特别是在高糖饮食压力下。优势的高糖细菌(巴氏醋酸杆菌)独特地编码了几个基因,使尿酸降解,介导高糖饮食引起的尿酸积累对果蝇的毒性作用。我们的研究表明,宿主基因型×微生物组×环境的相互作用对宿主表型有实质性影响,突出了宿主进化和生态环境如何共同塑造微生物组的适应潜力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.90
自引率
4.30%
发文量
502
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: Proceedings B is the Royal Society’s flagship biological research journal, accepting original articles and reviews of outstanding scientific importance and broad general interest. The main criteria for acceptance are that a study is novel, and has general significance to biologists. Articles published cover a wide range of areas within the biological sciences, many have relevance to organisms and the environments in which they live. The scope includes, but is not limited to, ecology, evolution, behavior, health and disease epidemiology, neuroscience and cognition, behavioral genetics, development, biomechanics, paleontology, comparative biology, molecular ecology and evolution, and global change biology.
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