Linking Invertebrate Microbiomes To Host Evolutionary Trajectory: A Case Study Of The Nacellid Limpet Holobionts Across Different Provinces Of The Southern Ocean.

The ecological and evolutionary dynamicsbetween microbiomes and animals, mainlyvertebrates,have been extensively studied over the last decades, driven bythe exponential development of next-generation sequencing. Thefitness of various eukaryotic hosts has been shown to strongly rely on their associat...

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Main Author: Schwob, Guillaume Julien
Other Authors: Fundacion Instituto De Ecosistemas Antarticos Y Subantarticos (MI-BASE)
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10533/84439
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author Schwob, Guillaume Julien
author2 Fundacion Instituto De Ecosistemas Antarticos Y Subantarticos (MI-BASE)
author_facet Schwob, Guillaume Julien
author_sort Schwob, Guillaume Julien
collection Repositorio ANID (Agencia Nacional de Investigación y Desarrollo)
description The ecological and evolutionary dynamicsbetween microbiomes and animals, mainlyvertebrates,have been extensively studied over the last decades, driven bythe exponential development of next-generation sequencing. Thefitness of various eukaryotic hosts has been shown to strongly rely on their associated microbial communities, leading to the rise of the concept of holobiont. This paradigm redefinesindividualsas biologicallycomplex systems comprising bothhost genomesand theirmicrobiomes. The phenotypic plasticity of holobionts, largely determined by their microbiomes, is crucialforrapid adaptationtochangingenvironmental conditions. Understanding the adaptive traits of holobionts is critical, especially for the conservation of holobiont populations in an era of increasing disturbances to natural environments.Co-diversification, the simultaneousdiversification of hosts and symbionts,represents the most definitive and empirical testof shared evolutionary historywithinholobiont assemblages.However, detectingco-diversifiedsymbiontsinfluencingholobiont phenotype remains difficult, particularly in wild animalsharboringcomplex microbial communities andliving in logisticallychallenging ecosystems like the oceans—ironically, the environmentsmost profoundly affectedby current global changes.Understanding ecological and evolutionary interdependence withinmarine holobiontsrequiresto focuson low-complexitymicrobiomesassociated with hosts with a well-known population structure, and genetic and evolutionary trajectory.Wepropose a comprehensive approach that combinesmultigenic metabarcoding with phylogenetic congruencyanalysesacrossvariousmicrobial organizational levels—ranging from community to symbiont microdiversity—to elucidateco-diversification patternswithinmarine invertebrate holobionts.We aim to characterize the microbiomes associated with the true limpet Nacella, an attractive mollusk model of the Southern Ocean, and assess the degree of interdependence by examining the influence of host historical biogeography on symbiont ...
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genre Southern Ocean
genre_facet Southern Ocean
geographic Nacella
Southern Ocean
geographic_facet Nacella
Southern Ocean
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long_lat ENVELOPE(-60.783,-60.783,-62.467,-62.467)
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https://hdl.handle.net/10533/84439
op_rights Atribución-NoComercial-SinDerivadas 3.0 Chile
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spelling ftanid:oai:repositorio.anid.cl:10533/84439 2025-05-25T13:53:55+00:00 Linking Invertebrate Microbiomes To Host Evolutionary Trajectory: A Case Study Of The Nacellid Limpet Holobionts Across Different Provinces Of The Southern Ocean. Schwob, Guillaume Julien Fundacion Instituto De Ecosistemas Antarticos Y Subantarticos (MI-BASE) 2025-04-23T19:28:53Z https://hdl.handle.net/10533/84439 unknown 11250023 Masculino https://hdl.handle.net/10533/84439 Atribución-NoComercial-SinDerivadas 3.0 Chile http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/cl/ info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Conocimiento General Ciencias Exactas y Naturales Biología 1 Ecología y Ciencias Ambientales Ciencias Naturales Ciencias Biológicas Ecología Proyecto info:eu-repo/semantics/researchProposal info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion 2025 ftanid 2025-04-28T23:31:34Z The ecological and evolutionary dynamicsbetween microbiomes and animals, mainlyvertebrates,have been extensively studied over the last decades, driven bythe exponential development of next-generation sequencing. Thefitness of various eukaryotic hosts has been shown to strongly rely on their associated microbial communities, leading to the rise of the concept of holobiont. This paradigm redefinesindividualsas biologicallycomplex systems comprising bothhost genomesand theirmicrobiomes. The phenotypic plasticity of holobionts, largely determined by their microbiomes, is crucialforrapid adaptationtochangingenvironmental conditions. Understanding the adaptive traits of holobionts is critical, especially for the conservation of holobiont populations in an era of increasing disturbances to natural environments.Co-diversification, the simultaneousdiversification of hosts and symbionts,represents the most definitive and empirical testof shared evolutionary historywithinholobiont assemblages.However, detectingco-diversifiedsymbiontsinfluencingholobiont phenotype remains difficult, particularly in wild animalsharboringcomplex microbial communities andliving in logisticallychallenging ecosystems like the oceans—ironically, the environmentsmost profoundly affectedby current global changes.Understanding ecological and evolutionary interdependence withinmarine holobiontsrequiresto focuson low-complexitymicrobiomesassociated with hosts with a well-known population structure, and genetic and evolutionary trajectory.Wepropose a comprehensive approach that combinesmultigenic metabarcoding with phylogenetic congruencyanalysesacrossvariousmicrobial organizational levels—ranging from community to symbiont microdiversity—to elucidateco-diversification patternswithinmarine invertebrate holobionts.We aim to characterize the microbiomes associated with the true limpet Nacella, an attractive mollusk model of the Southern Ocean, and assess the degree of interdependence by examining the influence of host historical biogeography on symbiont ... Other/Unknown Material Southern Ocean Repositorio ANID (Agencia Nacional de Investigación y Desarrollo) Nacella ENVELOPE(-60.783,-60.783,-62.467,-62.467) Southern Ocean
spellingShingle Conocimiento General
Ciencias Exactas y Naturales
Biología 1
Ecología y Ciencias Ambientales
Ciencias Naturales
Ciencias Biológicas
Ecología
Schwob, Guillaume Julien
Linking Invertebrate Microbiomes To Host Evolutionary Trajectory: A Case Study Of The Nacellid Limpet Holobionts Across Different Provinces Of The Southern Ocean.
title Linking Invertebrate Microbiomes To Host Evolutionary Trajectory: A Case Study Of The Nacellid Limpet Holobionts Across Different Provinces Of The Southern Ocean.
title_full Linking Invertebrate Microbiomes To Host Evolutionary Trajectory: A Case Study Of The Nacellid Limpet Holobionts Across Different Provinces Of The Southern Ocean.
title_fullStr Linking Invertebrate Microbiomes To Host Evolutionary Trajectory: A Case Study Of The Nacellid Limpet Holobionts Across Different Provinces Of The Southern Ocean.
title_full_unstemmed Linking Invertebrate Microbiomes To Host Evolutionary Trajectory: A Case Study Of The Nacellid Limpet Holobionts Across Different Provinces Of The Southern Ocean.
title_short Linking Invertebrate Microbiomes To Host Evolutionary Trajectory: A Case Study Of The Nacellid Limpet Holobionts Across Different Provinces Of The Southern Ocean.
title_sort linking invertebrate microbiomes to host evolutionary trajectory: a case study of the nacellid limpet holobionts across different provinces of the southern ocean.
topic Conocimiento General
Ciencias Exactas y Naturales
Biología 1
Ecología y Ciencias Ambientales
Ciencias Naturales
Ciencias Biológicas
Ecología
topic_facet Conocimiento General
Ciencias Exactas y Naturales
Biología 1
Ecología y Ciencias Ambientales
Ciencias Naturales
Ciencias Biológicas
Ecología
url https://hdl.handle.net/10533/84439