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Journal ArticleDOI

16S rDNA-Based Analysis of Dominant Bacterial Populations Associated with Early Life Stages of Coho Salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch)

Jaime Romero, +1 more
- 06 Apr 2006 - 
- Vol. 51, Iss: 4, pp 422-430
TLDR
It is suggested that a stable microbiota is established after the first feeding stages and its major components could be derived from water and egg epibiota.
Abstract
In this study, we used a 16S rDNA–based approach to determine bacterial populations associated with coho salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch) in its early life stages, highlighting dominant bacteria in the gastrointestinal tract during growth in freshwater. The present article is the first molecular analysis of bacterial communities of coho salmon. Cultivability of the salmon gastrointestinal microbiota was estimated by comparison of direct microscopic counts (using acridine orange) with colony counts (in tryptone soy agar). In general, a low fraction (about 1%) of the microbiota could be recovered as cultivable bacteria. Using DNA extracted directly from individuals belonging to the same lot, bacterial communities present in eggs and gastrointestinal tract of first-feeding fries and juveniles were monitored by polymerase chain reaction–denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (PCR–DGGE). The DGGE profiles revealed simple communities in all stages and exposed changes in bacterial community during growth. Sequencing and phylogenetic analysis of excised DGGE bands revealed the nature of the main bacteria found in each stage. In eggs, the dominant bacteria belonged to β-Proteobacteria (Janthinobacterium and Rhodoferax). During the first feeding stage, the most abundant bacteria in the gastrointestinal tract clustered with γ-Proteobacteria (Shewanella and Aeromonas). In juveniles ranging from 2 to 15 g, prevailing bacteria were Pseudomonas and Aeromonas. To determine the putative origin of dominant Pseudomonas and Aeromonas found in juvenile gastrointestinal tracts, primers for these groups were designed based on sequences retrieved from DGGE gel. Subsequently, samples of the water influent, pelletized feed, and eggs were analyzed by PCR amplification. Only those amplicons obtained from samples of eggs and the water influent presented identical sequences to the dominant bands of DGGE. Overall, our results suggest that a stable microbiota is established after the first feeding stages and its major components could be derived from water and egg epibiota.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Evidence for a core gut microbiota in the zebrafish

TL;DR: Gut microbiota membership in domesticated and recently caught zebrafish was strikingly similar, with a shared core gut microbiota, and the zebra fish intestinal habitat selects for specific bacterial taxa despite radical differences in host provenance and domestication status.
Journal ArticleDOI

Reciprocal Gut Microbiota Transplants from Zebrafish and Mice to Germ-free Recipients Reveal Host Habitat Selection

TL;DR: Results reveal that communities are assembled in predictable ways, and differences in community structure between zebrafish and mice arise in part from distinct selective pressures imposed within the gut habitat of each host.
Journal ArticleDOI

Role of gastrointestinal microbiota in fish

TL;DR: The involvement of GI microbiota in fish nutrition, epithelial development, immunity as well as disease outbreak, and the need for manipulating the gut microbiota with useful beneficial microbes through probiotic, prebiotic and synbiotic concepts for better fish health management are indicated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Teleost microbiomes: the state of the art in their characterization, manipulation and importance in aquaculture and fisheries

TL;DR: An explosion in research in this sector is predicted in line with the increasing global demand for fish protein, and the need to find sustainable approaches to improve aquaculture yield, with the reduced cost and increasing ease of next generation sequencing technologies.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Gut Microbiota of Marine Fish.

TL;DR: The factors shaping marine fish gut microbiota are reviewed and gaps in the research are highlighted and a clear understanding of the role that specific gut microbiota play is still lacking.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

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