The gut microbiome of farmed Arctic char (Salvelinus alpinus) is shaped by feeding stage and nutrient presence

Author:

Knobloch Stephen12ORCID,Skirnisdóttir Sigurlaug1ORCID,Dubois Marianne3,Mayolle Lucie4,Kolypczuk Laetitia5,Leroi Françoise5,Leeper Alexandra167,Passerini Delphine5,Marteinsson Viggó Þ18

Affiliation:

1. Matís ohf., Microbiology Research Group , Vínlandsleið 12, 113 Reykjavík , Iceland

2. Department of Food Technology, University of Applied Sciences Fulda , Leipziger Strasse 123, 36037 Fulda , Germany

3. ESBS/University of Strasbourg , 300 Bd Sébastien Brant, 67085 Strasbourg , France

4. University of Technology of Compiègne , Rue Roger Couttolenc, 60203 Compiègne , France

5. Ifremer, MASAE Microbiologie Aliment Santé Environnement , BP 21105, F-44000 Nantes , France

6. Department of Animal and Aquaculture Sciences, Faculty of Biosciences, Norwegian University of Life Sciences , Arboretveien 6, 1430 Ås , Norway

7. Iceland Ocean Cluster, Department of Research and Innovation , Grandagarður 16, 101 Reykjavík , Iceland

8. Faculty of Food Science and Nutrition, University of Iceland , Sæmundargata 2, 101 Reykjavik , Iceland

Abstract

Abstract The gut microbiome plays an important role in maintaining health and productivity of farmed fish. However, the functional role of most gut microorganisms remains unknown. Identifying the stable members of the gut microbiota and understanding their functional roles could aid in the selection of positive traits or act as a proxy for fish health in aquaculture. Here, we analyse the gut microbial community of farmed juvenile Arctic char (Salvelinus alpinus) and reconstruct the metabolic potential of its main symbionts. The gut microbiota of Arctic char undergoes a succession in community composition during the first weeks post-hatch, with a decrease in Shannon diversity and the establishment of three dominant bacterial taxa. The genome of the most abundant bacterium, a Mycoplasma sp., shows adaptation to rapid growth in the nutrient-rich gut environment. The second most abundant taxon, a Brevinema sp., has versatile metabolic potential, including genes involved in host mucin degradation and utilization. However, during periods of absent gut content, a Ruminococcaceae bacterium becomes dominant, possibly outgrowing all other bacteria through the production of secondary metabolites involved in quorum sensing and cross-inhibition while benefiting the host through short-chain fatty acid production. Whereas Mycoplasma is often present as a symbiont in farmed salmonids, we show that the Ruminococcaceae species is also detected in wild Arctic char, suggesting a close evolutionary relationship between the host and this symbiotic bacterium.

Funder

H2020

AVS

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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