解开哺乳动物系统性多病的潜在机制。

IF 4.5 1区 生物学 Q1 BIOCHEMISTRY & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
Elizabeth K. Mallott
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引用次数: 0

摘要

哺乳动物肠道微生物群落经常被发现是宿主特异性的微生物群落组成在宿主物种内部比在宿主物种之间更相似,并且一些个体微生物类群始终与单个或小组宿主物种相关联。已经提出了导致这种系统性疾病模式或宿主特异性的生态进化动力学,但缺乏对驱动这些关系的机制的有力测试。在本期《分子生态学》杂志上,Mazel等人。(2023)将大型扩增子测序数据集与细菌表型特征相结合,以测试微生物扩散模式是否有助于肠道微生物组的宿主特异性。他们发现,传播模式和耐氧性都可以预测微生物的专业性。水平传播的耐氧微生物更有可能是多面手,而垂直传播的厌氧菌更有可能仅限于少数宿主物种。这种对公开可用数据的创造性使用为检验关于系统性多病潜在机制的假设提供了一个路线图。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Disentangling the mechanisms underlying phylosymbiosis in mammals

Mammalian gut microbial communities are frequently found to be host-specific—microbial community compositions are more similar within than between host species—and some individual microbial taxa consistently associate with a single or small set of host species. The ecoevolutionary dynamics that result in this pattern of phylosymbiosis or host specificity have been proposed, but robust tests of the mechanisms driving these relationships are lacking. In this issue of Molecular Ecology, Mazel et al. (2023) combine large amplicon sequencing data sets with bacterial phenotypic traits to test whether microbial dispersal patterns contribute to the host specificity of the gut microbiome. They find that both transmission mode and oxygen tolerance are predictive of how specialized a microbe is. Horizontally transmitted, oxygen-tolerant microbes are more likely to be generalists, and vertically transmitted anaerobes are more likely to be limited to a few host species. This creative use of publicly available data provides a roadmap for testing hypotheses about the mechanisms underlying phylosymbiosis.

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来源期刊
Molecular Ecology
Molecular Ecology 生物-进化生物学
CiteScore
8.40
自引率
10.20%
发文量
472
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: Molecular Ecology publishes papers that utilize molecular genetic techniques to address consequential questions in ecology, evolution, behaviour and conservation. Studies may employ neutral markers for inference about ecological and evolutionary processes or examine ecologically important genes and their products directly. We discourage papers that are primarily descriptive and are relevant only to the taxon being studied. Papers reporting on molecular marker development, molecular diagnostics, barcoding, or DNA taxonomy, or technical methods should be re-directed to our sister journal, Molecular Ecology Resources. Likewise, papers with a strongly applied focus should be submitted to Evolutionary Applications. Research areas of interest to Molecular Ecology include: * population structure and phylogeography * reproductive strategies * relatedness and kin selection * sex allocation * population genetic theory * analytical methods development * conservation genetics * speciation genetics * microbial biodiversity * evolutionary dynamics of QTLs * ecological interactions * molecular adaptation and environmental genomics * impact of genetically modified organisms
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