Data

Data from: Gut microbiota modifies olfactory-guided microbial preferences and foraging decisions in Drosophila

Macquarie University
Adam Chun-Nin Wong (Aggregated by) Alistair M. Senior (Aggregated by) Fleur Ponton (Aggregated by) G. Gregory Neely (Aggregated by) Juliano Morimoto (Aggregated by)
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ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Adc&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2FANDS&rft_id=info:doi10.5061/dryad.2np32&rft.title=Data from: Gut microbiota modifies olfactory-guided microbial preferences and foraging decisions in Drosophila&rft.identifier=10.5061/dryad.2np32&rft.publisher=Macquarie University&rft.description=The gut microbiota affects a wide spectrum of host physiological traits, including development [ 1–5 ], germline [ 6 ], immunity [ 7–9 ], nutrition [ 4, 10, 11 ], and longevity [ 12, 13 ]. Association with microbes also influences fitness-related behaviors such as mating [ 14 ] and social interactions [ 15, 16 ]. Although the gut microbiota is evidently important for host wellbeing, how hosts become associated with particular assemblages of microbes from the environment remains unclear. Here, we present evidence that the gut microbiota can modify microbial and nutritional preferences of Drosophila melanogaster. By experimentally manipulating the gut microbiota of flies subjected to behavioral and chemosensory assays, we found that fly-microbe attractions are shaped by the identity of the host microbiota. Conventional flies exhibit preference for their associated Lactobacillus, a behavior also present in axenic flies as adults and marginally as larvae. By contrast, fly preference for Acetobacter is primed by early-life exposure and can override the innate preference. These microbial preferences are largely olfactory guided and have profound impact on host foraging, as flies continuously trade off between acquiring beneficial microbes and balancing nutrients from food. Our study shows a role of animal microbiota in shaping host fitness-related behavior through their chemosensory responses, opening a research theme on the interrelationships between the microbiota, host sensory perception, and behavior.Usage NotesData from: Gut microbiota modifies olfactory-guided microbial preferences and foraging decisions in DrosophilaThe file contains the raw data set for the Manuscript with the title mentioned above. Files are separated by figures, each in its individual tab within the Excel file. Variable names are self-explanatory.Wong et al 2017-RawData-perfigure.xlsx&rft.creator=Adam Chun-Nin Wong&rft.creator=Alistair M. Senior&rft.creator=Fleur Ponton&rft.creator=G. Gregory Neely&rft.creator=Juliano Morimoto&rft.creator=Mathieu Lihoreau&rft.creator=Qiao-Ping Wang&rft.creator=Stephen J. Simpson&rft.date=2022&rft_rights= https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/&rft_subject=Other education not elsewhere classified&rft_subject=Acetobacter&rft_subject=foraging&rft_subject=Lactobacillus plantarum&rft_subject=Acetobacter pomorum&rft_subject=food selection&rft_subject=olfaction&rft.type=dataset&rft.language=English Access the data

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The gut microbiota affects a wide spectrum of host physiological traits, including development [ 1–5 ], germline [ 6 ], immunity [ 7–9 ], nutrition [ 4, 10, 11 ], and longevity [ 12, 13 ]. Association with microbes also influences fitness-related behaviors such as mating [ 14 ] and social interactions [ 15, 16 ]. Although the gut microbiota is evidently important for host wellbeing, how hosts become associated with particular assemblages of microbes from the environment remains unclear. Here, we present evidence that the gut microbiota can modify microbial and nutritional preferences of Drosophila melanogaster. By experimentally manipulating the gut microbiota of flies subjected to behavioral and chemosensory assays, we found that fly-microbe attractions are shaped by the identity of the host microbiota. Conventional flies exhibit preference for their associated Lactobacillus, a behavior also present in axenic flies as adults and marginally as larvae. By contrast, fly preference for Acetobacter is primed by early-life exposure and can override the innate preference. These microbial preferences are largely olfactory guided and have profound impact on host foraging, as flies continuously trade off between acquiring beneficial microbes and balancing nutrients from food. Our study shows a role of animal microbiota in shaping host fitness-related behavior through their chemosensory responses, opening a research theme on the interrelationships between the microbiota, host sensory perception, and behavior.

Usage Notes


Data from: Gut microbiota modifies olfactory-guided microbial preferences and foraging decisions in DrosophilaThe file contains the raw data set for the Manuscript with the title mentioned above. Files are separated by figures, each in its individual tab within the Excel file. Variable names are self-explanatory.Wong et al 2017-RawData-perfigure.xlsx

Issued: 10 06 2022

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