Title (eng)
A brain microbiome in salmonids at homeostasis
Abstract (eng)
Ectotherms have peculiar relationships with microorganisms. For instance, bacteria are recovered from the blood and internal organs of healthy teleosts. However, the presence of microbial communities in the healthy teleost brain has not been proposed. Here, we report a living bacterial community in the brain of healthy salmonids with bacterial loads comparable to those of the spleen and 1000-fold lower than in the gut. Brain bacterial communities share >50% of their diversity with gut and blood bacterial communities. Using culturomics, we obtained 54 bacterial isolates from the brains of healthy trout. Comparative genomics suggests that brain bacteria may have adaptations for niche colonization and polyamine biosynthesis. In a natural system, Chinook salmon brain microbiomes shift from juveniles to reproductively mature adults. Our study redefines the physiological relationships between the brain and bacteria in teleosts. This symbiosis may endow salmonids with a direct mechanism to sense and respond to environmental microbes.
Keywords (eng)
AnimalsBrain MicrobiologyHomeostasisMicrobiotaSalmonidae MicrobiologyRNARibosomal16S GeneticsPhylogenyBacteria Classification Genetics Isolation & Purification
Type (eng)
Language
[eng]
Persistent identifier
https://phaidra.vetmeduni.ac.at/o:3718
Is in series
Title (eng)
Science Advances
Volume
10
Issue
38
ISSN
2375-2548
Issued
2024
Number of pages
17
Publication
American Association for the Advancement of Science
Date issued
2024
Access rights (eng)
Rights statement (eng)
Copyright © 2024 The Authors
Content
Details
Object type
PDFDocument
Format
application/pdf
Created
04.12.2024 08:51:39
This object is in collection
Metadata
Veterinärmedizinische Universität Wien (Vetmeduni) | Veterinärplatz 1 | 1210 Wien - Österreich | T +43 1 25077-0 | Web: vetmeduni.ac.at