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Species-specific Microorganisms in Acid-tolerant Chironomus Larvae Reared in a Neutral pH Range under Laboratory Conditions: Single Dataset Analysis
Summary
Researchers systematically compared larval microbiomes of 11 Chironomus midge species from acidic and neutral pH environments using amplicon sequencing, finding that acid-tolerant species exhibited lower microbiome evenness and a biased abundance of specific microorganisms consistent with acid tolerance mechanisms.
To obtain a more detailed understanding of organismal acid tolerance, the larval microbiomes of 11 Chironomus species collected from acidic or neutral pH areas in Japan and reared at pH 7-8 under laboratory conditions were systematically compared using an amplicon sequencing ana-lysis. Evenness values were lower for the larval microbiomes of acid-tolerant Chironomus cf. riparius, Chironomus fusciceps, and Chironomus sulfurosus than for eight acid-sensitive species based on an alpha diversity ana-lysis. The lower evenness observed suggested a biased abundance of microorganisms, which was consistent with the identification of Chironomus species-specific microorganisms (such as Agromyces mediolanus and Comamonas odontotermitis related bacteria) with high abundance in acid-tolerant larvae. The abundance of specific microorganisms was also high in the microbiome of acid-tolerant larvae of Chironomus acerbiphilus reared at pH 4, but not in that of acid-sensitive larvae. Based on a PICRUSt2 ana-lysis, genes involved in saccharide transport were less abundant in the microbiome of acid-tolerant larvae than in that of acid-sensitive larvae, indicating nutrient-poor acidic environments. Although these results were obtained from single datasets, acid-tolerant larvae appeared to establish Chironomus species-specific interactions with microorganisms independent of saccharides, in contrast to acid-sensitive larvae. The present study is the first step towards understanding organismal acid tolerance.