Abstract

Almost all animals and plants are inhabited by diverse communities of microorganisms, the microbiota, thereby forming an integrated entity, the metaorganism. Natural selection should favor hosts that shape the community composition of these microbes to promote a beneficial host-microbe symbiosis. Indeed, animal hosts often pose selective environments, which only a subset of the environmentally available microbes are able to colonize. How these microbes assemble after colonization to form the complex microbiota is less clear. Neutral models are based on the assumption that the alternatives in microbiota community composition are selectively equivalent and thus entirely shaped by random population dynamics and dispersal. Here, we use the neutral model as a null hypothesis to assess microbiata composition in host organisms, which does not rely on invoking any adaptive processes underlying microbial community assembly. We show that the overall microbiota community structure from a wide range of host organisms, in particular including previously understudied invertebrates, is in many cases consistent with neutral expectations. Our approach allows to identify individual microbes that are deviating from the neutral expectation and are therefore interesting candidates for further study. Moreover, using simulated communities, we demonstrate that transient community states may play a role in the deviations from the neutral expectation. Our findings highlight that the consideration of neutral processes and temporal changes in community composition are critical for an in-depth understanding of microbiota-host interactions.

Highlights

  • ObjectivesWe aim to overcome these limitations by consistently applying a neutral model to a variety of distinct host systems, including but not limited to a wide range of invertebrate hosts

  • The neutral model does not make any assumptions about the selective constraints that apply before and during colonization of the host and, in particular, it is not concerned with any host traits that may restrict the range of colonizing microbes [33]

  • We found that the distribution of non-neutral operational taxonomic unit (OTU) around the neutral prediction is roughly symmetrical in all cases, and no microbial order deviated systematically above or below the neutral expectation (S3 Fig)

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Summary

Objectives

We aim to overcome these limitations by consistently applying a neutral model to a variety of distinct host systems, including but not limited to a wide range of invertebrate hosts

Methods
Results
Conclusion
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