Research Article

The microbiota of long-living and cancer-free blind mole rat $\textit{(Nannospalax xanthodon)}$ from the edge of its distribution in Northern Anatolia

Volume: 32 Number: 2 December 30, 2023
EN

The microbiota of long-living and cancer-free blind mole rat $\textit{(Nannospalax xanthodon)}$ from the edge of its distribution in Northern Anatolia

Abstract

The mammalian gut is colonized by microorganisms that affect development, immune system, energy metabolism, and reproduction. The majority of studies focused on laboratory or domestic animals in artificial setups, leaving the research focused on wild species underrepresented. The Anatolian Blind Molerat (hereafter ABMR), $\textit{Nannospalax xanthodon}$, is a subterranean rodent that receives much attention due to its unique traits, such as tolerance to extreme hypoxic stress, resistance to cancer, and longer lifespan compared to similarly sized rodents. In this study, we characterize the gut microbiota of ABMR from its northernmost geographic distribution using 16S rRNA metabarcoding and compare our results with the microbiome characteristics of a few other ABMR populations studied previously, as well as other rodent species. The 16S rRNA barcode dataset revealed that approximately 90% of the ABMR gut microbiota comprises Firmicutes and Bacteriodota bacterial phyla, typical of most mammals. In addition, the ABMR gut microbiota has a high abundance of performance- and longevity-linked bacterial families. Overall, our results generally align well with the previous studies on blind molerats and emphasize the importance of studying the microbiome of natural populations.

Keywords

Thanks

This study was supported by TÜBİTAK grant 220Z032, and the collection of samples was funded by TUBITAK 119Z400. DC and JK were supported by Czech Science Foundation (19-19307S). The numerical calculations reported in this paper were partially performed at TÜBİTAK ULAKBİM, High Performance and Grid Computing Center (TRUBA resources).

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Details

Primary Language

English

Subjects

Structural Biology

Journal Section

Research Article

Early Pub Date

November 21, 2023

Publication Date

December 30, 2023

Submission Date

April 13, 2023

Acceptance Date

June 24, 2023

Published in Issue

Year 2023 Volume: 32 Number: 2

Cited By

Communications Faculty of Sciences University of Ankara Series C Biology licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

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