RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 UV-irradiated rotifers for the maintenance of gnotobiotic zebrafish larvae JF bioRxiv FD Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory SP 2024.08.15.608160 DO 10.1101/2024.08.15.608160 A1 Rosales, Susana Márquez A1 Bouchard, Peter I. A1 Olmstead, Emily M. A1 Parthasarathy, Raghuveer YR 2024 UL http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2024/08/15/2024.08.15.608160.abstract AB Host-associated microbial communities profoundly impact the health of humans and other animals. Zebrafish have proven to be a useful model for uncovering mechanisms of host-microbe interactions, but the difficulty of maintaining germ-free or gnotobiotic zebrafish beyond one week post-fertilization has limited their utility. To address this, we have developed a simple protocol using ultraviolet (UV) irradiation of rotifers, a common and nutrient-rich prey species for larval zebrafish, to reduce the bacterial load associated with the rotifers by several orders of magnitude while maintaining their motility and viability. We find that though feeding with UV-treated rotifers does not preserve the sterility of germ-free fish, it enables the maintenance of pre-existing bacterial communities. Normal feeding, in striking contrast, leads to the near total depletion of these prior populations. We measure the abundance of single- and three-species consortia of zebrafish-commensal bacteria inoculated into initially germ-free larvae in a series of experiments extending to 8 days of feeding, or 13 days post-fertilization. We find, in fish fed UV-treated rotifers, persistence of bacterial populations on timescales of days, together with strong species-specific variation. In addition, re-inoculation of differently labeled strains of the same zebrafish-commensal species alongside feeding leads to colonization by the new bacteria without displacement of earlier microbes. Our method will facilitate the use of gnotobiotic zebrafish for investigations of phenomena that emerge later in animal development and for studies that probe microbiome composition fluctuations and stability over extended timescales.Competing Interest StatementThe authors have declared no competing interest.