文章摘要
Study on the Amphibious Adaptability of MudskippersBased on Intestinal Metagenome
  
DOI:10.16768/j.issn.1004-874X.2022.11.004
Author NameAffiliation
DONG Bo 1, DENG Hanyi1 , SUN Yiqiu1 , FANG Yuanjie 1, PENG Miaoxi1 , SHI Qiong2, 3, BEI Jinlong1 , WEI Wenkang1 , CHEN Zhuang1 1. 广东省农业科学院农业生物基因研究中心 / 广东省农作物种质资源保存与利用重点实验室 广东 广州 5106402. 深圳市海洋生物基因组 学重点实验室广东 深圳 518083 3. 深圳大学生命科学与海洋学院广东 深圳 518061 
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Abstract:
      【Objective】In this study, we report the adaptability of two representative amphibian species, blue-spotted mudskipper (Boleophthalmus Periophthalmodon, BP) and giant-fin mudskipper (Periophthalmus magnuspinnatus, PM) to live on land , with a view to revealing the key role of gastrointestinal microbiota in the adaptation and specific immunity of mudskippers to amphibious life. 【Method】By using 16S amplicon sequencing and metagenomic tec hniques, the microbial composition, diversity, abundance and function of the intestines of amphibian and aquatic fish species were compared. The metagenomic data were utilized to compare two representative mudskippers (BP, PM) and three typical aquatic fish species including Ctenopharyngodon idella (CI), Hypophthalmichthys molitri (HM) and Aristichthys nobilis (AN) and the potential terrestrial marker gastrointestinal microbiota in mudskippers were investigated. In addition, the representative data of gastrointestinal microbiota from marine fish, freshwater fish, amphibians and terrestrial animals were obtained through extensive literature to compare the composition and function of intestinal microbiota in mudskippers.【Result】Firmicutes, Proteobacteria, Bacteroidetes and Fusobacteria were dominant in the gastrointestinal microbiota of mudskippers. The contents of various dominant phyla were strikingly different among BP, PM and aquatic fishes. Th e most significant difference in the gastrointestinal microbiota between the two groups was the proportion of CKC4, a gastrointestinal bacterial phylum that is speculated to be related to host lipid metabolism, which ranged from 4% to 27% in CI, HM, AN but was not found in the mudskipper. In addition, the gastrointestinal microbiota of mudskipper containeds typical bacterial families in terrestrial animals, freshwater and seawater fishes fish and amphibians, which was consistent with their life characteristics at the salt-water interface between water and land. It was also observed that fishes had a higher proportion of Clostridium and Proteobacteria than terrestrial animals, which had more Bacteroides species. More interestingly, certain bacteria strains like S24-7, previously thought to be specific in terrestrial animals, were also identified in both BP and PM. 【Conclusion】 The results suggest that the gastrointestinal microbial communities of mudskipper are more complex and diverse than those of aquatic fishes, which subsequently stimulate the host to form innate immune receptor gene families with higher diversity and more copy numbers through pathogen-related molecular pattern (PAMP) to a more complicated amphibian environment.
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