Elasmobranchs Exhibit Species-Specific Epidermal Microbiomes Guided by Denticle Topography

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Abstract

Elasmobranch epidermal microbiomes are species-specific, yet microbial assembly and retainment drivers are mainly unknown. The contribution of host-derived factors in recruiting an associated microbiome is essential for understanding host-microbe interactions. Here, we focus on the physical aspect of the host skin in structuring microbial communities. Each species of elasmobranch exhibits unique denticle morphology, and we investigate whether microbial communities and functional pathways are correlated with the morphological features or follow the phylogeny of the three species. We extracted and sequenced the DNA from the epidermal microbial communities of three captive shark species: Horn ( Heterodontus francisci ), Leopard ( Triakis semifasciata ), and Swell shark ( Cephaloscyllium ventriosum ) and use electron microscopy to measure the dermal denticle features of each species. Our results outline species-specific microbial communities, as microbiome compositions vary at the phyla level; C. ventriosum hosted a higher relative abundance of Pseudomonadota and Bacillota, while H. francisci were associated with a higher prevalence of Euryarchaeota and Aquificae, and Bacteroidota and Crenarchaeota were ubiquitous with T. semifasciata . Functional pathways performed by each species’ respective microbiome were species-specific metabolic. Microbial genes associated with aminosugars and electron-accepting reactions were correlated with the distance between dermal denticles, whereas desiccation stress genes were only present when the dermal denticle overlapped. Microbial genes associated with Pyrimidines, chemotaxis and virulence followed the phylogeny of the sharks. Several microbial genera display associations that resemble host evolutionary lineage, while others had linear relationships with interdenticle distance. Therefore, denticle morphology was a selective influence for some microbes and functions in the microbiome contributing to the phylosymbiosis.

Importance

Microbial communities form species-specific relationships with vertebrate hosts, but the drivers of these relationships remain an outstanding question. We explore the relationship between a physical feature of the host and the microbial community. A distinguishing feature of the subclass Elasmobranchii (sharks, rays, and skates), is the presence of dermal denticles on the skin. These structures protrude through the epidermis providing increased swimming efficiency for the host and an artificial model skin affect microbial recruitment and establishment of cultured microbes but has not been tested on natural microbiomes. Here, we show some naturally occurring microbial genera and functional attributes were correlated with dermal denticle features, suggesting they are one, but not only contributing factor in microbiome structure on benthic sharks.

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