4.6 Article

Determining the Composition of Resident and Transient Members of the Oyster Microbiome

Journal

FRONTIERS IN MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 12, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2021.828692

Keywords

animal microbiome; oyster microbiome; microbial community assembly; resident microbes; transient microbes; microbial ecology

Categories

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship Program (GRFP) [1451070]
  2. Division Of Graduate Education
  3. Direct For Education and Human Resources [1451070] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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The study identified a strong population-specific signal in the microbial community composition of oysters sampled in the wild, and found that even oysters reared in a common garden environment maintained distinct gill-associated microbial communities reflecting their wild population of origin. The majority of gill-associated microbes were resident members specific to each oyster population, but a small portion of the microbial communities was transient and moved among oyster populations, suggesting stochastic assembly also contributes to the oyster gill microbiome.
To better understand how complex microbial communities become assembled on eukaryotic hosts, it is essential to disentangle the balance between stochastic and deterministic processes that drive their assembly. Deterministic processes can create consistent patterns of microbiome membership that result in persistent resident communities, while stochastic processes can result in random fluctuation of microbiome members that are transient with regard to their association to the host. We sampled oyster reefs from six different populations across the east coast of the United States. At each site we collected gill tissues for microbial community analysis and additionally collected and shipped live oysters to Northeastern University where they were held in a common garden experiment. We then examined the microbiome shifts in gill tissues weekly for 6 weeks using 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing. We found a strong population-specific signal in the microbial community composition of field-sampled oysters. Surprisingly, the oysters sampled during the common garden experiment maintained compositionally distinct gill-associated microbial communities that reflected their wild population of origin, even after rearing them in a common garden for several weeks. This indicates that oyster gill-associated microbiota are predominantly composed of resident microbes specific to host population, rather than being a reflection of their immediate biotic and abiotic surroundings. However, certain bacterial taxa tended to appear more frequently on individuals from different populations than on individuals from the same population, indicating that there is a small portion of the gill microbiome that is transient and is readily exchanged with the environmental pool of microbes. Regardless, the majority of gill-associated microbes were resident members that were specific to each oyster population, suggesting that there are strong deterministic factors that govern a large portion of the gill microbiome. A small portion of the microbial communities, however, was transient and moved among oyster populations, indicating that stochastic assembly also contributes to the oyster gill microbiome. Our results are relevant to the oyster aquaculture industry and oyster conservation efforts because resident members of the oyster microbiome may represent microbes that are important to oyster health and some of these key members vary depending on oyster population.

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