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Free keywords:
skin; microbiota; house mouse
Abstract:
Throughout their evolutionary history, animals have been continuously exposed to a
great diversity of microbial species with which they have co-existed across various types of
environments. So far, our knowledge about the co-evolutionary dynamics between hosts and
their symbiotic microbial communities remains poor and is nearly exclusively derived from
gut-associated microbiota, while further barrier organs including the skin harbor diverse and
complex microbial communities. Indeed, only few studies addressed the impact of skinassociated
microbiota on host fitness, and even fewer inspected the forces shaping interindividual
variability of the skin microbiota.
Using the house mouse as a model organism, in my thesis projects, I aimed to bring
new insights into the evolutionary and ecological processes that govern the skin-associated
bacterial communities. In a first study, by employing several mouse lines that represent
various evolutionary distances, I evaluated the effects of environment and host genetics in
shaping the composition and diversity of the standing (DNA-based profiling) skin microbiota.
I found a large influence of the external environment and a moderate effect of host genetics
on the composition and diversity of skin bacterial communities. Second, to further quantify
and define host genomic regions that co-vary with abundances of skin bacterial taxa,
I performed high-resolution QTL mapping on standing and active (RNA-based profiling) skin
microbiota using the fifteenth generation of an advanced intercross mouse population. The
defined QTLs span narrow intervals, while some target single host genes. Additionally, the
number of QTLs within the active communities is considerably higher compared to the
standing communities, suggesting that profiling the skin microbiota at the transcript level
provides stronger signals about host-microbiota interactions. Finally, in order to uncover similarities and divergences in community diversity and
structure of the skin microbiota between natural and laboratory reared populations of house
mice, I thoroughly compared the composition and structure of both standing and active
bacterial communities of wild and laboratory individuals. This first of its kind investigation
reveals extensive overlap in the community membership of wild and laboratory mice,
indicating that communities assembled in a similar manner. Interestingly, we report
significant structural changes between these two mouse groups along with a greater
inter-individual variation within the laboratory reared mice.
Together, these findings meaningfully extend our current knowledge about the forces that
govern the diversity of skin-associated bacterial communities.