Abstract
There is mounting evidence that intestinal microbiota communities and their genes (the gut microbiome) influence how animals behave and interact with their environment, driving individual variation. Individual covariation in behavioural, physiological, and cognitive traits among individuals along a fast-slow continuum is thought to arise because these traits are linked as part of an adaptive pace-of-life strategy. Yet paradoxically, trait intercorrelation is absent or disrupted in some populations but not others. Here, we provide experimental evidence from aquatic pond snails (Lymnaea stagnalis) that environmental stressors and the gut microbiota explain host phenotypic plasticity and disrupted covariation among traits. Antibiotic exposure at varying levels of ecologically relevant concentrations had multiple effects starting with gut microbiota diversity, differential abundance, and inferred function. Memory declined in line with antibiotic concentrations that caused the most profound gut microbiota disruption, and although pace-of-life traits remained rigid, their covariation did not. Moreover, inferred microbial metabolic pathways with biologically relevant host functions explained individual and treatment variation in phenotypes. Together, our results point to the gut microbiome as a proximate mechanism influencing the emergence and maintenance of phenotypic variation within populations and highlights the need to decipher whether the gut microbiome's sensitivity to environmental pollution facilitates adaptive or maladaptive phenotypic plasticity.
Original language | English |
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Article number | wrae078 |
Number of pages | 12 |
Journal | ISME Journal |
Volume | 18 |
Issue number | 1 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 30 May 2024 |
Keywords
- antibiotic pollution
- gut microbiota
- microbiome–gut–brain axis
- Lymnaea stagnalis
- pace-of-life
- personality
- syndromes
- memory
- behavioural plasticity
- cognition
- Anti-Bacterial Agents/pharmacology
- Snails/microbiology
- Phenotype
- Animals
- Memory/drug effects
- Lymnaea/microbiology
- Gastrointestinal Microbiome/drug effects
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Antibiotic pollution disrupts the gut microbiome and blocks memory in aquatic snails Antibiotics prevent snails from forming new memories by disrupting their gut microbiome - the community of beneficial bacteria found in their guts.
30 May 2024
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