Gut microbiome community profiling of Bornean bats with different feeding guilds

Bats are extraordinary mammals. They have evolved to consume various dietary sources, such as insects, fruits, nectar, blood, and meat. This diversity has generated considerable interest in the scientific community, resulting in efforts to leverage bats as model organisms to study the correlation be...

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Main Authors: Muhd Amsyari, Morni, Julius, William-Dee, Emy Ritta, Jinggong, Nor Al-Shuhada, Sabaruddin, Nur Afiqah Aqilah, Azhar, Muhammad Amin Iman, Azmi, Peter A., Larsen, Jaya Seelan, Sathiya Seelan, Lesley Maurice, Bilung, Faisal Ali, Anwarali Khan
Format: Article
Language:en
Published: BioMed Central Ltd 2025
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Online Access:http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/47713/1/Morni_et_al-2025-Animal_Microbiome.pdf
http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/47713/
https://animalmicrobiome.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s42523-025-00389-w
https://doi.org/10.1186/s42523-025-00389-w
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Summary:Bats are extraordinary mammals. They have evolved to consume various dietary sources, such as insects, fruits, nectar, blood, and meat. This diversity has generated considerable interest in the scientific community, resulting in efforts to leverage bats as model organisms to study the correlation between diet and gut microbiome community. Although such studies now commonly use Next Generation Sequencing (NGS), similar studies are early in their development in Southeast Asia, especially in Malaysia, which harbours an incredibly diverse bat fauna. This study provides pioneering NGS metabarcoding information on Bornean bats. By using a high-throughput Nanopore-based 16S rRNA gene sequencing method, Bacillota, Pseudomonadota, and Campylobacterota were found in insectivorous bats and phytophagous bats. Both nsectivorous and phytophagous groups harboured no dominant taxon (D=0.076; D=0.085). A comparative analysis of gut bacteria functional groups identified eight major groups in both phytophagous and insectivorous bats, with fermentation being the predominant group. The correlation network analysis revealed a negative correlation between the ‘good bacteria’ Lactobacillus and various pathogenic bacteria genera, such as Salmonella (-0.4124) and Yersinia (-0.4654), demonstrating its prebiotic characteristics. This study broadens our understanding of the bat gut microbiome from various diets, with emphasis on new data from Borneo