Gut microbiota differences between paired intestinal wall and digesta samples in three small species of fish

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Gut microbiota differences between paired intestinal wall and digesta samples in three small species of fish. / Nyholm, Lasse; Odriozola, Iñaki; Martin Bideguren, Garazi; Aizpurua, Ostaizka; Alberdi, Antton.

In: PeerJ, Vol. 10, e12992, 2022.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Nyholm, L, Odriozola, I, Martin Bideguren, G, Aizpurua, O & Alberdi, A 2022, 'Gut microbiota differences between paired intestinal wall and digesta samples in three small species of fish', PeerJ, vol. 10, e12992. https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.12992

APA

Nyholm, L., Odriozola, I., Martin Bideguren, G., Aizpurua, O., & Alberdi, A. (2022). Gut microbiota differences between paired intestinal wall and digesta samples in three small species of fish. PeerJ, 10, [e12992]. https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.12992

Vancouver

Nyholm L, Odriozola I, Martin Bideguren G, Aizpurua O, Alberdi A. Gut microbiota differences between paired intestinal wall and digesta samples in three small species of fish. PeerJ. 2022;10. e12992. https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.12992

Author

Nyholm, Lasse ; Odriozola, Iñaki ; Martin Bideguren, Garazi ; Aizpurua, Ostaizka ; Alberdi, Antton. / Gut microbiota differences between paired intestinal wall and digesta samples in three small species of fish. In: PeerJ. 2022 ; Vol. 10.

Bibtex

@article{fc012ee416b64354b641f310961681ed,
title = "Gut microbiota differences between paired intestinal wall and digesta samples in three small species of fish",
abstract = "The microbial gut communities of fish are receiving increased attention for their relevance, among others, in a growing aquaculture industry. The members of these communities are often split into resident (long-term colonisers specialised to grow in and adhere to the mucus lining of the gut) and transient (short-term colonisers originated from food items and the surrounding water) microorganisms. Separating these two communities in small fish are impeded by the small size and fragility of the gastrointestinal tract. With the aim of testing whether it is possible to recover two distinct communities in small species of fish using a simple sampling technique, we used 16S amplicon sequencing of paired intestinal wall and digesta samples from three small Cyprinodontiformes fish. We examined the diversity and compositional variation of the two recovered communities, and we used joint species distribution modelling to identify microbes that are most likely to be a part of the resident community. For all three species we found that the diversity of intestinal wall samples was significantly lower compared to digesta samples and that the community composition between sample types was significantly different. Across the three species we found seven unique families of bacteria to be significantly enriched in samples from the intestinal wall, encompassing most of the 89 ASVs enriched in intestinal wall samples. We conclude that it is possible to characterise two different microbial communities and identify potentially resident microbes through separately analysing samples from the intestinal wall and digesta from small species of fish. We encourage researchers to be aware that different sampling procedures for gut microbiome characterization will capture different parts of the microbiome and that this should be taken into consideration when reporting results from such studies on small species of fish.",
keywords = "Allochthonous, Autochthonous, Fish microbiome, Host-microbiota interactions",
author = "Lasse Nyholm and I{\~n}aki Odriozola and {Martin Bideguren}, Garazi and Ostaizka Aizpurua and Antton Alberdi",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2022 PeerJ Inc.. All rights reserved.",
year = "2022",
doi = "10.7717/peerj.12992",
language = "English",
volume = "10",
journal = "PeerJ",
issn = "2167-8359",
publisher = "PeerJ",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Gut microbiota differences between paired intestinal wall and digesta samples in three small species of fish

AU - Nyholm, Lasse

AU - Odriozola, Iñaki

AU - Martin Bideguren, Garazi

AU - Aizpurua, Ostaizka

AU - Alberdi, Antton

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2022 PeerJ Inc.. All rights reserved.

PY - 2022

Y1 - 2022

N2 - The microbial gut communities of fish are receiving increased attention for their relevance, among others, in a growing aquaculture industry. The members of these communities are often split into resident (long-term colonisers specialised to grow in and adhere to the mucus lining of the gut) and transient (short-term colonisers originated from food items and the surrounding water) microorganisms. Separating these two communities in small fish are impeded by the small size and fragility of the gastrointestinal tract. With the aim of testing whether it is possible to recover two distinct communities in small species of fish using a simple sampling technique, we used 16S amplicon sequencing of paired intestinal wall and digesta samples from three small Cyprinodontiformes fish. We examined the diversity and compositional variation of the two recovered communities, and we used joint species distribution modelling to identify microbes that are most likely to be a part of the resident community. For all three species we found that the diversity of intestinal wall samples was significantly lower compared to digesta samples and that the community composition between sample types was significantly different. Across the three species we found seven unique families of bacteria to be significantly enriched in samples from the intestinal wall, encompassing most of the 89 ASVs enriched in intestinal wall samples. We conclude that it is possible to characterise two different microbial communities and identify potentially resident microbes through separately analysing samples from the intestinal wall and digesta from small species of fish. We encourage researchers to be aware that different sampling procedures for gut microbiome characterization will capture different parts of the microbiome and that this should be taken into consideration when reporting results from such studies on small species of fish.

AB - The microbial gut communities of fish are receiving increased attention for their relevance, among others, in a growing aquaculture industry. The members of these communities are often split into resident (long-term colonisers specialised to grow in and adhere to the mucus lining of the gut) and transient (short-term colonisers originated from food items and the surrounding water) microorganisms. Separating these two communities in small fish are impeded by the small size and fragility of the gastrointestinal tract. With the aim of testing whether it is possible to recover two distinct communities in small species of fish using a simple sampling technique, we used 16S amplicon sequencing of paired intestinal wall and digesta samples from three small Cyprinodontiformes fish. We examined the diversity and compositional variation of the two recovered communities, and we used joint species distribution modelling to identify microbes that are most likely to be a part of the resident community. For all three species we found that the diversity of intestinal wall samples was significantly lower compared to digesta samples and that the community composition between sample types was significantly different. Across the three species we found seven unique families of bacteria to be significantly enriched in samples from the intestinal wall, encompassing most of the 89 ASVs enriched in intestinal wall samples. We conclude that it is possible to characterise two different microbial communities and identify potentially resident microbes through separately analysing samples from the intestinal wall and digesta from small species of fish. We encourage researchers to be aware that different sampling procedures for gut microbiome characterization will capture different parts of the microbiome and that this should be taken into consideration when reporting results from such studies on small species of fish.

KW - Allochthonous

KW - Autochthonous

KW - Fish microbiome

KW - Host-microbiota interactions

U2 - 10.7717/peerj.12992

DO - 10.7717/peerj.12992

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 35223211

AN - SCOPUS:85125744221

VL - 10

JO - PeerJ

JF - PeerJ

SN - 2167-8359

M1 - e12992

ER -

ID: 307227787