Litcius/Paper detail

Host genotype structures the microbiome of a globally dispersed marine phytoplankton

Olivia M. Ahern, Kerry Whittaker, Tiffany C. Williams, Dana E. Hunt, Tatiana A. Rynearson

2021Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences53 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

, with microbiomes associating more strongly with host genetic population than with environmental factors. The microbiome association with host genetic population persisted across different ocean basins, suggesting that microbiomes may be associated with host populations for decades. To isolate the impact of host genotype on microbiomes, a common garden experiment using eight genotypes from three distinct host populations again found that host genotype influenced microbial community composition, suggesting that a process we describe as genotypic filtering, analogous to environmental filtering, shapes phytoplankton microbiomes. In both the environmental and laboratory studies, microbiome variation between genotypes suggests that other factors influenced microbiome composition but did not swamp the dominant signal of host genetic background. The long-term association of microbiomes with specific host genotypes reveals a possible mechanism explaining the evolution and maintenance of complex phytoplankton-bacteria chemical exchanges.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyMicrobiomeHost (biology)PhytoplanktonPopulationGenotypeEcologyGeneticsGeneNutrientDemographySociologyMicrobial Community Ecology and PhysiologyMarine Biology and Ecology ResearchMarine and coastal ecosystems