Two Species of Long-Day Breeding Hamsters Exhibit Distinct Gut Microbial Responses to Photoperiodic Variations
Chao Fan, Huiliang Xue, Jinhui Xu, Ming Wu, Lei Chen, Laixiang Xu

TL;DR
This study shows that two types of hamsters respond differently to changes in daylight length in terms of their gut microbes, suggesting species-specific adaptations.
Contribution
The study reveals distinct gut microbial responses to photoperiod in two long-day breeding hamster species.
Findings
Striped hamsters showed no change in gut microbial diversity under different photoperiods.
Djungarian hamsters exhibited lower microbial diversity and significant shifts in bacterial composition under long daylight conditions.
Photoperiod affected microbial network complexity and potential functions differently in the two species.
Abstract
The regulatory role of photoperiod on animals is crucial, and its connection with the gut microbial communities is now receiving increasing attention. The aim of this study was to investigate whether the gut microbiota of animals with similar light-regulated life history traits exhibit consistent responses to the photoperiod. Through laboratory lighting control experiments, we found that two species of long-day breeding rodents, striped hamsters (Cricetulus barabensis) and Djungarian hamsters (Phodopus sungorus), exhibited distinct gut microbial responses in diversity, bacterial composition and potential functional features to the photoperiodic variations. This further implies that there may be distinct variations in the role played by the gut microbiota of different animals in assisting the host in adapting to environmental changes. The relationship between the gut microbiota and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGut microbiota and health · Dietary Effects on Health · Nutritional Studies and Diet
