1. Pinpointing the microbiota of tardigrades: What is really there?
- Author
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Surmacz B, Stec D, Prus-Frankowska M, Buczek M, Michalczyk Ł, and Łukasik P
- Subjects
- Animals, Phylogeny, DNA, Bacterial genetics, Sequence Analysis, DNA methods, Tardigrada, Microbiota genetics, RNA, Ribosomal, 16S genetics, Bacteria classification, Bacteria genetics, Bacteria isolation & purification, Symbiosis
- Abstract
Microbiota are considered significant in the biology of tardigrades, yet their diversity and distribution remain largely unexplored. This is partly due to the methodological challenges associated with studying the microbiota of small organisms that inhabit microbe-rich environments. In our study, we characterized the microbiota of 31 species of cultured tardigrades using 16S rRNA amplicon sequencing. We employed various sample preparation strategies and multiple types of controls and estimated the number of microbes in samples using synthetic DNA spike-ins. We also reanalysed data from previous tardigrade microbiome studies. Our findings suggest that the microbial communities of cultured tardigrades are predominantly composed of bacterial genotypes originating from food, medium, or reagents. Despite numerous experiments, we found it challenging to identify strains that were enriched in certain tardigrades, which would have indicated likely symbiotic associations. Putative tardigrade-associated microbes rarely constituted more than 20% of the datasets, although some matched symbionts identified in other studies. We also uncovered serious contamination issues in previous tardigrade microbiome studies, casting doubt on some of their conclusions. We concluded that tardigrades are not universally dependent on specialized microbes. Our work underscores the need for rigorous safeguards in studies of the microbiota of microscopic organisms and serves as a cautionary tale for studies involving samples with low microbiome abundance., (© 2024 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2024
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