Contrasted host specificity of gut and endosymbiont bacterial communities in alpine grasshoppers and crickets

Author:

Mazel Florent1,Pitteloud Camille23456,Guisan Antoine17,Pellissier Loïc456

Affiliation:

1. Department of Ecology and Evolution, University of Lausanne , Lausanne 1015 , Switzerland

2. Département de la mobilité , du territoire et de l‘environnement, , Sion 1950 , Switzerland

3. Service des forêts, de la nature et du paysage , du territoire et de l‘environnement, , Sion 1950 , Switzerland

4. Ecosystems and Landscape Evolution , Department of Environmental Systems Science, , Zürich 8092 , Switzerland

5. ETH Zürich , Department of Environmental Systems Science, , Zürich 8092 , Switzerland

6. Swiss Federal Research Institute WSL , Birmensdorf 8903 , Switzerland

7. Institute of Earth Surface Dynamics, University of Lausanne , Lausanne 1015 , Switzerland

Abstract

Abstract Bacteria colonize the body of macroorganisms to form associations ranging from parasitic to mutualistic. Endosymbiont and gut symbiont communities are distinct microbiomes whose compositions are influenced by host ecology and evolution. Although the composition of horizontally acquired symbiont communities can correlate to host species identity (i.e. harbor host specificity) and host phylogeny (i.e. harbor phylosymbiosis), we hypothesize that the microbiota structure of vertically inherited symbionts (e.g. endosymbionts like Wolbachia) is more strongly associated with the host species identity and phylogeny than horizontally acquired symbionts (e.g. most gut symbionts). Here, using 16S metabarcoding on 336 guts from 24 orthopteran species (grasshoppers and crickets) in the Alps, we observed that microbiota correlated to host species identity, i.e. hosts from the same species had more similar microbiota than hosts from different species. This effect was ~5 times stronger for endosymbionts than for putative gut symbionts. Although elevation correlated with microbiome composition, we did not detect phylosymbiosis for endosymbionts and putative gut symbionts: closely related host species did not harbor more similar microbiota than distantly related species. Our findings indicate that gut microbiota of studied orthopteran species is more correlated to host identity and habitat than to the host phylogeny. The higher host specificity in endosymbionts corroborates the idea that—everything else being equal—vertically transmitted microbes harbor stronger host specificity signal, but the absence of phylosymbiosis suggests that host specificity changes quickly on evolutionary time scales.

Funder

National Swiss Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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