Termites are associated with external species-specific bacterial
communities
- Patrik Soukup,
- Tomas Vetrovsky,
- Petr Stiblik,
- Katerina Votypkova,
- Amrita Chakraborty,
- David Sillam-Dusses,
- Miroslav Kolarik,
- Iñaki Odriozola,
- Nathan Lo,
- Petr Baldrian,
- Jan Sobotnik,
- Thomas Bourguignon
Tomas Vetrovsky
Institute of Microbiology Czech Academy of Sciences Laboratory of Environmental Microbiology
Author ProfileKaterina Votypkova
Czech University of Life Sciences Prague
Author ProfileAmrita Chakraborty
Czech University of Life Sciences Prague
Author ProfileMiroslav Kolarik
Institute of Microbiology Czech Academy of Sciences Laboratory of Environmental Microbiology
Author ProfileIñaki Odriozola
Institute of Microbiology Czech Academy of Sciences
Author ProfileThomas Bourguignon
Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology Graduate University
Author ProfileAbstract
All termites have established a wide range of associations with
symbiotic microbes in their guts. Some termite species are also
associated with microbes that grow in their nests, but the prevalence of
these associations remains largely unknown. Here, we studied the
bacterial communities associated with the termites and galleries of
three wood-feeding termite species using 16S rRNA amplicon sequencing.
We found that the composition of bacterial communities differs among
termite bodies, termite galleries, and control wood fragments devoid of
termite activities, in a species-specific manner. Termite galleries were
enriched in bacterial OTUs belonging to Rhizobiales and Actinobacteria,
which were often shared by several termite species. The abundance of
several bacterial OTUs, generally belonging to genera known to include
animal pathogens, was depleted in termite galleries. Our results
demonstrate that termites not only harbour unique bacterial communities
inside their guts, but also shape the communities colonizing their nests
and galleries.