4.3 Review

Not all animals need a microbiome

Journal

FEMS MICROBIOLOGY LETTERS
Volume 366, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/femsle/fnz117

Keywords

microbiota; holobiont; symbiosis; gut bacteria; endosymbiont; 16S rRNA gene

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Funding

  1. Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences
  2. U.S. National Science Foundation [DEB 1542653]
  3. Cornell Institute for Host-Microbe Interaction and Disease

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It is often taken for granted that all animals host and depend upon a microbiome, yet this has only been shown for a small proportion of species. We propose that animals span a continuum of reliance on microbial symbionts. At one end are the famously symbiont-dependent species such as aphids, humans, corals and cows, in which microbes are abundant and important to host fitness. In the middle are species that may tolerate some microbial colonization but are only minimally or facultatively dependent. At the other end are species that lack beneficial symbionts altogether. While their existence may seem improbable, animals are capable of limiting microbial growth in and on their bodies, and a microbially independent lifestyle may be favored by selection under some circumstances. There is already evidence for several 'microbiome-free' lineages that represent distantly related branches in the animal phylogeny. We discuss why these animals have received such little attention, highlighting the potential for contaminants, transients, and parasites to masquerade as beneficial symbionts. We also suggest ways to explore microbiomes that address the limitations of DNA sequencing. We call for further research on microbiome-free taxa to provide a more complete understanding of the ecology and evolution of macrobe-microbe interactions.

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