Host-microbe symbioses rely on the successful transmission or acquisition of symbionts in each new generation.
More...Host-microbe symbioses rely on the successful transmission or acquisition of symbionts in each new generation. Amphibians host a diverse cutaneous microbiota, and many of these symbionts appear to be mutualistic and may limit infection by the chytrid fungus, Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis, which has caused global amphibian population declines and extinctions in recent decades. Using bar-coded 454 pyrosequencing of the 16S rRNA gene, we addressed the question of symbiont transmission by examining variation in amphibian skin microbiota across species and sites and in direct relation to environmental microbes. While acquisition of environmental microbes occurs in some host-symbiont systems, this has not been extensively examined in free-living vertebrate-microbe symbioses. Juvenile bullfrogs (Rana catesbeiana), adult red-spotted newts (Notophthalmus viridescens), pond water, and pond substrate were sampled at a single pond to examine host-specificity and potential environmental transmission of microbiota. To assess population-level variation in skin microbiota, adult newts from two additional sites were also sampled.
Less...| Accession | PRJEB6103 |
| Scope | Monoisolate |
| Publications | Walke JB et al., "Amphibian skin may select for rare environmental microbes.", ISME J, 2014 Nov;8(11):2207-17 |
| Submission | Registration date: 12-Apr-2015 VIRGINIA TECH |
| Locus Tag Prefix | BN2173 |
Project Data:
| Resource Name | Number of Links |
|---|
| Publications |
| PubMed | 1 |
| PMC | 1 |
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