巨蛤中共生细菌的水平传播及寄主选择性清扫。

IF 5.1 Q1 ECOLOGY
ISME communications Pub Date : 2025-03-02 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1093/ismeco/ycaf037
Cong Liu, Jian Zhang, Qiqi Li, Yuehuan Zhang, Si Zhang, Ziniu Yu, Jun Li, Jie Li
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引用次数: 0

摘要

巨蛤具有重要的生态意义,其健康和发育依赖于相关细菌,但对这些细菌的传播模式和群落动态演替知之甚少。本研究采用16S rRNA基因测序和显微镜技术,研究了巨蛤(Tridacna crocea)发育早期(受精卵、囊胚、d -幼虫和pediveliger幼虫)共生细菌的传播和群落动态。荧光原位杂交和透射电镜未检测到受精卵和成体性腺配子内的共生细菌,但扫描电镜显示了卵表面微绒毛上的微生物结构,提示其作为微生物载体的作用。16S rRNA测序证实受精卵中存在微生物,表明细菌通过外部垂直传播(附着在微绒毛上)或水平传播获得。鉴于生殖器官缺乏内化细菌,我们倾向于将共生细菌获得归类为水平传播。微生物群落分析表明,crocea在其发育过程中有相当一部分微生物群来自海水。在达到pediveliger阶段之前,细菌群落组成与周围海水非常相似,主要为Rhodobacteraceae科。随着藏红花的成熟,寄主的选择压力增加(如确定性组装),使微生物群落简化,多样性降低。在pediveliger阶段,Endozoicomonas成为优势菌属,在生殖腺内形成了很大比例的细菌群落。这凸显了宿主-微生物相互作用在维持生物多样性和通过动态群落组装过程驱动生态系统稳定方面的生态意义。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Horizontal transmission of symbiotic bacteria and host selective sweep in the giant clam Tridacna crocea.

Giant clams, with their significant ecological importance, depend on associated bacteria for their health and development, yet the transmission modes and succession of community dynamics of these bacteria remain poorly understood. This study employed 16S rRNA gene sequencing and microscopy to investigate the transmission and community dynamics of symbiotic bacteria in the giant clam Tridacna crocea during early developmental stages (fertilized eggs, blastocyst, D-larvae, and pediveliger larvae). Fluorescence in situ hybridization and transmission electron microscopy did not detect internal symbiotic bacteria in fertilized eggs and adult gonad gametes, but scanning electron microscopy revealed microbial structures on egg surface microvilli, suggesting their role as microbial carriers. 16S rRNA sequencing confirmed microbial presence in fertilized eggs, indicating bacterial acquisition via external vertical transmission (adherence to microvilli) or horizontal transmission. Given the lack of internalized bacteria in reproductive organs, we prefer to classify the symbiotic bacteria acquisition as horizontal transmission. Microbial community analysis showed that T. crocea acquired a significant portion of its microbiome from seawater throughout its development. Before reaching the pediveliger stage, the bacterial community composition closely resembled that of the surrounding seawater, primarily featuring the family Rhodobacteraceae. As T. crocea matured, the host's selective pressure increased (e.g. deterministic assembly), which simplified the microbial community and reduced diversity. During the pediveliger stage, the genus Endozoicomonas became dominant, forming a large proportion of the bacterial community within the gonads. This highlights the ecological significance of host-microbe interactions in maintaining biodiversity and driving ecosystem stability through dynamic community assembly processes.

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