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A first insight into the intestinal microbiota of snow trout (Schizothorax zarudnyi)
Authors:Mahdi Ghanbari  Hadi Shahraki  Wolfgang Kneifel  Konrad J. Domig
Affiliation:1.Department of Food Science and Technology, Institute of Food Science,BOKU — University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences,Vienna,Austria;2.Department of Fisheries,University of Zabol, Faculty of Natural Resources,Zabol,Iran;3.Iranian Fisheries Organization, Sistan branch,Zabol,Iran
Abstract:This study addresses the biodiversity profile of bacterial community in the intestinal lumen and mucosa of snow trout fish by applying 16S rRNA gene 454-pyrosequencing. A total of 209,106 sequences with average length 689 (±53) were filtered, denoised, trimmed, and then sorted into OTUs based on 97 % sequence similarity using the USEARCH software pipeline. Bacteria representing 10 phyla were found in the samples investigated. Fimicutes ribotypes were present in intestinal-mucosa and lumen in all fish and often dominated the libraries (average 43 and 38 %, respectively). Proteobacteria were also prevalent, but at a lower relative abundance, at 22 and 29 % in mucosa and lumen, respectively. The autochthonous microbiota was dominated by sequences belonging to the Bacilli (mean sequence abundance 24 %), in particular the Lactobacillaceae, with Lactobacillus and Pediococcous being the most abundant genera. Fewer Bacilli (mean sequence abundance 22 %) and Actinobacteria (2 %) were present in the lumen, and allochthonous communities consisted of a more even split among the bacterial classes, with increases in sequences assigned to members of the γ-Proteobacteria (16 %) and Fusobacteriia (8 %). The principal bacterial genera recorded in the lumen belonged to the lactic acid bacteria group, Cetobacterium, Clostridium and Synechococcus. Results obtained suggest that the lumen and mucosal layer of the snow trout intestine may host different microbial communities. Moreover, both regions harbour a diverse microbiome with a greater microbial diversity in the intestinal mucus compared with the luminal communities of the fish. Many of these microbes might be of high physiological relevance for the fish and may play key roles in the functioning of its gut.
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