Nearly (?) sterile avian egg in a passerine bird

Author:

Těšický Martin123ORCID,Schmiedová Lucie12,Krajzingrová Tereza1,Samblas Mercedes Gomez14,Bauerová Petra5,Kreisinger Jakub1,Vinkler Michal1

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Science, Department of Zoology, Charles University , Viničná 7, 128 43 Prague , Czech Republic

2. Institute of Vertebrate Biology, v.v.i., The Czech Academy of Sciences , Květná 8, Brno 603 65 , Czech Republic

3. Institute of Paleonatomy, Domestification Research and History of Veterinary Medicine, Ludwig Maxmilian University of Munich , Kaulbachstr. 37 III, 80539 Munich , Germany

4. Faculty of Science, Department of Parasitology, Campus Universitario de Fuentenueva, University of Granada , Profesor Adolfo Rancano, 18071 Granada , Spain

5. Division of Air Quality, Czech Hydrometeorological Institute , Tušimice Observatory , Tušimice 6, 432 01 Kadaň , Czech Republic

Abstract

Abstract During early ontogeny, microbiome affects development of the gastrointestinal tract, immunity, and survival in vertebrates. Bird eggs are thought to be (1) initially sterile (sterile egg hypothesis) and (2) colonized after oviposition through horizontal trans-shell migration, or (3) initially seeded with bacteria by vertical transfer from mother oviduct. To date, however, little empirical data illuminate the contribution of these mechanisms to gut microbiota formation in avian embryos. We investigated microbiome of the egg content (day 0; E0-egg), embryonic gut at day 13 (E13) and female faeces in a free-living passerine, the great tit (Parus major), using a methodologically advanced procedure combining 16S rRNA gene sequencing and microbe-specific qPCR assays. Our metabarcoding revealed that the avian egg is (nearly) sterile, but acquires a slightly richer microbiome during the embryonic development. Of the three potentially pathogenic bacteria targeted by qPCR, only Dietzia was found in E0-egg (yet also in negative controls), E13 gut and female samples, which might indicate possible vertical transfer. Unlike in poultry, we have shown that major bacterial colonization of the gut in passerines does not occur before hatching. We emphasize that protocols that carefully check for environmental contamination are critical in studies with low-bacterial biomass samples.

Funder

Charles University

MEYS

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Ecology,Microbiology

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