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Social environment drives sex and age‐specific variation in Drosophila melanogaster microbiome composition and predicted function

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posted on 2025-08-01, 13:05 authored by T Leech, L McDowall, KP Hopkins, SM Sait, XA Harrison, A Bretman
Social environments influence multiple traits of individuals including immunity, stress and ageing, often in sex-specific ways. The composition of the microbiome (the assemblage of symbiotic microorganisms within a host) is determined by environmental factors and the host's immune, endocrine and neural systems. The social environment could alter host microbiomes extrinsically by affecting transmission between individuals, probably promoting homogeneity in the microbiome of social partners. Alternatively, intrinsic effects arising from interactions between the microbiome and host physiology (the microbiota-gut-brain axis) could translate social stress into dysbiotic microbiomes, with consequences for host health. We investigated how manipulating social environments during larval and adult life-stages altered the microbiome composition of Drosophila melanogaster fruit flies. We used social contexts that particularly alter the development and lifespan of males, predicting that any intrinsic social effects on the microbiome would therefore be sex-specific. The presence of adult males during the larval stage significantly altered the microbiome of pupae of both sexes. In adults, same-sex grouping increased bacterial diversity in both sexes. Importantly, the microbiome community structure of males was more sensitive to social contact at older ages, an effect partially mitigated by housing focal males with young rather than coaged groups. Functional analyses suggest that these microbiome changes impact ageing and immune responses. This is consistent with the hypothesis that the substantial effects of the social environment on individual health are mediated through intrinsic effects on the microbiome, and provides a model for understanding the mechanistic basis of the microbiota-gut-brain axis.

Funding

Boothman, Reynolds and Smithells

RG130550

Royal Society

University of Leeds

ZSL Mission Opportunity Fund

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© 2021 John Wiley & Sons Ltd

Notes

This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Wiley via the DOI in this record Data availability statement: Sequencing data has been submitted to the NCBI Sequence Read Archive (PRJNA565891, PRJNA565929, PRJNA565132), and all other data are freely accessible from the Leeds Research Data Repository (https://doi.org/10.5518/985).

Journal

Molecular Ecology

Publisher

Wiley

Version

  • Accepted Manuscript

Language

en

FCD date

2021-09-17T12:14:13Z

FOA date

2022-09-07T23:00:00Z

Citation

Published online 8 September 2021

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