Abstract

BackgroundDisentangling the dynamics of microbial interactions within communities improves our comprehension of metacommunity assembly of microbiota during host development and under perturbations. To assess the impact of stochastic variation of neutral processes on microbiota structure and composition under disturbance, two types of microbial habitats, free-living (water), and host-associated (skin and gut) were experimentally exposed to either a constant or gradual selection regime exerted by two sublethal cadmium chloride dosages (CdCl2). Yellow Perch (Perca flavescens) was used as a piscivorous ecotoxicological model. Using 16S rDNA gene based metataxonomics, quantitative diversity metrics of water, skin and gut microbial communities were characterized along with development and across experimental conditions.ResultsAfter 30 days, constant and gradual selection regimes drove a significant alpha diversity increase for both skin and gut microbiota. In the skin, pervasive negative correlations between taxa in both selection regimes in addition to the taxonomic convergence with the environmental bacterial community, suggest a loss of colonisation resistance resulting in the dysbiosis of yellow perch microbiota. Furthermore, the network connectivity in gut microbiome was exclusively maintained by rare (low abundance) OTUs, while most abundant OTUs were mainly composed of opportunistic invaders such as Mycoplasma and other genera related to fish pathogens such as Flavobacterium. Finally, the mathematical modelling of community assembly using both non-linear least squares models (NLS) based estimates of migration rates and normalized stochasticity ratios (NST) based beta-diversity distances suggested neutral processes drove by taxonomic drift in host and water communities for almost all treatments. The NLS models predicted higher demographic stochasticity in the cadmium-free host and water microbiomes, however, NST models suggested higher ecological stochasticity under perturbations.ConclusionsNeutral models agree that water and host-microbiota assembly promoted by rare taxa have evolved predominantly under neutral processes with potential involvement of deterministic forces sourced from host filtering and cadmium selection. The early signals of perturbations in the skin microbiome revealed antagonistic interactions by a preponderance of negative correlations in the co-abundance networks. Our findings enhance our understanding of community assembly host-associated and free-living under anthropogenic selective pressure.

Highlights

  • Disentangling the dynamics of microbial interactions within communities improves our comprehension of metacommunity assembly of microbiota during host development and under perturbations

  • Neutral models agree that water and host-microbiota assembly promoted by rare taxa have evolved predominantly under neutral processes with potential involvement of deterministic forces sourced from host filtering and cadmium selection

  • The assembly of gut microbial communities may have evolved under non-neutral processes due to the cadmium as a disrupting factor and due to the selection imposed by the host development [22]. In this experimental evolution study, our findings demonstrate the extensive involvement of low abundant taxa throughout community assembly and interacting network connectivity under perturbations

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Summary

Introduction

Disentangling the dynamics of microbial interactions within communities improves our comprehension of metacommunity assembly of microbiota during host development and under perturbations. Neutrality reflects that diversity units “Species” are ecologically equivalent, while stochasticity implies random variation in mean demographic rates [9] In such cases, local communities are randomly connected to a single metacommunity through differing rates of migration, death and birth [10,11,12]. The advent of culture-independent approaches such as highthroughput 16S rDNA metabarcoding paved the way for the conceptual framework of the Operational Taxonomic Unit (OTU) or Amplicons Sequences Variants (ASVs) used as units of microbial diversity Such advancements have opened new mathematical [14,15,16,17,18,19] and network-based [6, 20, 21] models for predicting ecological interactions between microbial communities. These models helped in constructing hypotheses on types of processes driving microbiomes assemblies over evolutionary time

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