2018
DOI: 10.1111/mec.14822
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Response of host–bacterial colonization in shrimp to developmental stage, environment and disease

Abstract: The host-associated microbiota is increasingly recognized to facilitate host fitness, but the understanding of the underlying ecological processes that govern the host-bacterial colonization over development and, particularly, under disease remains scarce. Here, we tracked the gut microbiota of shrimp over developmental stages and in response to disease. The stage-specific gut microbiotas contributed parallel changes to the predicted functions, while shrimp disease decoupled this intimate association. After ru… Show more

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Cited by 78 publications
(76 citation statements)
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“…Under these premises, discriminatory populations relating to life stage in shrimp gut are differed from these in rearing bacterioplankton communities. This pattern could be affected by, or attributed to, the effect of host selection, which supports the notion that host gut microbial community is not a simple mirror of their rearing environmental counterparts (Burns et al, 2016;Li et al, 2017;Zhang et al, 2018;Xiong et al, 2018a). Instead, shrimp selects specific bacteria (independent of their abundances in environmental pool) at a given life stage (Walke et al, 2014).…”
Section: Shrimp Ontogeny Governs Its Gut Bacterial Colonizationsupporting
confidence: 69%
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“…Under these premises, discriminatory populations relating to life stage in shrimp gut are differed from these in rearing bacterioplankton communities. This pattern could be affected by, or attributed to, the effect of host selection, which supports the notion that host gut microbial community is not a simple mirror of their rearing environmental counterparts (Burns et al, 2016;Li et al, 2017;Zhang et al, 2018;Xiong et al, 2018a). Instead, shrimp selects specific bacteria (independent of their abundances in environmental pool) at a given life stage (Walke et al, 2014).…”
Section: Shrimp Ontogeny Governs Its Gut Bacterial Colonizationsupporting
confidence: 69%
“…Intriguingly, a high stratification accuracy (95.5%) of shrimp life stages was achieved by using profiles of the top four gut age-discriminatory genera as independent variables (Figs. This pattern could be affected by, or attributed to, the effect of host selection, which supports the notion that host gut microbial community is not a simple mirror of their rearing environmental counterparts (Burns et al, 2016;Li et al, 2017;Zhang et al, 2018;Xiong et al, 2018a). By contrast, the four genera in water did not contribute comparable stratification accuracy for bacterioplankton communities.…”
Section: Gut Age-discriminatory Genera Are Indicative Of Shrimp Life supporting
confidence: 68%
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