4.7 Article

The gut microbiome and degradation enzyme activity of wild freshwater fishes influenced by their trophic levels

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 6, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/srep24340

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Key Scientific Program-control and treatment of water pollution [2012ZX07203-006-03, 2014ZX07203010-4]
  2. Fundament Research Funds for the Central Universities [2662015PY019]
  3. Scientific Research and Development program of Hubei Province [2013BHE006]
  4. International Scientific and Technology Cooperation Program of Wuhan City [2015030809020365]
  5. PhD Candidate Research Innovation Project of Huazhong Agricultural University [2014bs35]

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Vertebrate gut microbiome often underpins the metabolic capability and provides many beneficial effects on their hosts. However, little was known about how host trophic level influences fish gut microbiota and metabolic activity. In this study, more than 985,000 quality-filtered sequences from 24 16S rRNA libraries were obtained and the results revealed distinct compositions and diversities of gut microbiota in four trophic categories. PCoA test showed that gut bacterial communities of carnivorous and herbivorous fishes formed distinctly different clusters in PCoA space. Although fish in different trophic levels shared a large size of OTUs comprising a core microbiota community, at the genus level a strong distinction existed. Cellulose-degrading bacteria Clostridium, Citrobacter and Leptotrichia were dominant in the herbivorous, while Cetobacterium and protease-producing bacteria Halomonas were dominant in the carnivorous. PICRUSt predictions of metagenome function revealed that fishes in different trophic levels affected the metabolic capacity of their gut microbiota. Moreover, cellulase and amylase activities in herbivorous fishes were significantly higher than in the carnivorous, while trypsin activity in the carnivorous was much higher than in the herbivorous. These results indicated that host trophic level influenced the structure and composition of gut microbiota, metabolic capacity and gut content enzyme activity.

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