Frontiers in Microbiology (Nov 2015)

Behavioural microbiomics: a multi-dimensional approach to microbial influence onbehaviour

  • Adam CN Wong,
  • Adam CN Wong,
  • Andrew eHolmes,
  • Fleur ePonton,
  • Fleur ePonton,
  • Mathieu eLihoreau,
  • Mathieu eLihoreau,
  • Mathieu eLihoreau,
  • Kenneth eWilson,
  • David eRaubenheimer,
  • Stephen James Simpson

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2015.01359
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6

Abstract

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The role of microbes as a part of animal systems has historically been an under-appreciated aspect of animal life histories. Recently, evidence has emerged that microbes have wide-ranging influences on animal behaviour. Elucidating the complex relationships between host-microbe interactions and behaviour requires an expanded ecological perspective, involving the host, the microbiome and the environment; which, in combination, is termed the holobiont. We begin by seeking insights from the literature on host-parasite interactions, then expand to consider networks of interactions between members of the microbial community. A central aspect of the environment is host nutrition. We describe how interactions between the nutrient environment, the metabolic and behavioural responses of the host and the microbiome can be studied using an integrative framework called Nutritional Geometry (NG), which integrates and maps multiple aspects of the host and microbial response in multidimensional nutrient intake spaces.

Keywords