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The hologenome concept: we need to incorporate function
Authors:Francesco Catania  Ulrich Krohs  Marco Chittò  Diana Ferro  Kevin Ferro  Gildas Lepennetier  Hans-Dieter Görtz  Rebecca S Schreiber  Joachim Kurtz  Jürgen Gadau
Institution:1.Institute for Evolution and Biodiversity,University of Münster,Münster,Germany;2.Münster Graduate School of Evolution,University of Münster,Münster,Germany;3.Department of Philosophy and Center for Philosophy of Science,University of Münster,Münster,Germany;4.Institute of Hygiene ,University of Münster,Münster,Germany;5.Department of Zoology, Biological Institute,University of Stuttgart,Stuttgart,Germany;6.School of Life Sciences,Arizona State University,Tempe,USA
Abstract:Are we in the midst of a paradigm change in biology and have animals and plants lost their individuality, i.e., are even so-called ‘typical’ organisms no longer organisms in their own right? Is the study of the holobiont—host plus its symbiotic microorganisms—no longer optional, but rather an obligatory path that must be taken for a comprehensive understanding of the ecology and evolution of the individual components that make up a holobiont? Or are associated microbes merely a component of their host’s environment, and the holobiont concept is just a beautiful idea that does not add much or anything to our understanding of evolution? This article explores different aspects of the concept of the holobiont. We focus on the aspect of functional integration, a central holobiont property, which is only rarely considered thoroughly. We conclude that the holobiont comes in degrees, i.e., we regard the property of being a holobiont as a continuous trait that we term holobiontness, and that holobiontness is differentiated in several dimensions. Although the holobiont represents yet another level of selection (different from classical individual or group selection because it acts on a system that is composed of multiple species), it depends on the grade of functional integration whether or not the holobiont concept helps to cast light on the various degrees of interactions between symbiotic partners.
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