RESUMO
Climate warming and landscape fragmentation are both factors well known to threaten biodiversity and to generate species responses and adaptation. However, the impact of warming and fragmentation interplay on organismal responses remains largely under-explored, especially when it comes to gut symbionts, which may play a key role in essential host functions and traits by extending its functional and genetic repertoire. Here, we experimentally examined the combined effects of climate warming and habitat connectivity on the gut bacterial communities of the common lizard (Zootoca vivipara) over three years. While the strength of effects varied over the years, we found that a 2°C warmer climate decreases lizard gut microbiome diversity in isolated habitats. However, enabling connectivity among habitats with warmer and cooler climates offset or even reversed warming effects. The warming effects and the association between host dispersal behaviour and microbiome diversity appear to be a potential driver of this interplay. This study suggests that preserving habitat connectivity will play a key role in mitigating climate change impacts, including the diversity of the gut microbiome, and calls for more studies combining multiple anthropogenic stressors when predicting the persistence of species and communities through global changes.
Assuntos
Mudança Climática , Ecossistema , Microbioma Gastrointestinal , Lagartos , Animais , Lagartos/fisiologia , Lagartos/microbiologia , BiodiversidadeRESUMO
BACKGROUND: Parasites exert important selective pressures on host life history traits. In birds, feathers are inhabited by numerous microorganisms, some of them being able to degrade feathers or lead to infections. Preening feathers with secretions of the uropygial gland has been found to act as an antimicrobial defence mechanism, expected to regulate feather microbial communities and thus limit feather abrasion and infections. Here, we used an experimental approach to test whether Great tits (Parus major) modify their investment in the uropygial gland in response to differences in environmental microorganisms. RESULTS: We found that males, but not females, modified the size of their gland when exposed to higher bacterial densities on feathers. We also identified 16 wax esters in the uropygial gland secretions. The relative abundance of some of these esters changed in males and females, while the relative abundance of others changed only in females when exposed to greater bacterial loads on feathers. CONCLUSION: Birds live in a bacterial world composed of commensal and pathogenic microorganisms. This study provides the first experimental evidence for modifications of investment in the defensive trait that is the uropygial gland in response to environmental microorganisms in a wild bird.
Assuntos
Plumas/microbiologia , Microbiota , Passeriformes/microbiologia , Glândulas Sebáceas/anatomia & histologia , Glândulas Sebáceas/fisiologia , Animais , Animais Selvagens , Feminino , Masculino , Comportamento de Nidação , Tamanho do Órgão , Passeriformes/anatomia & histologia , Passeriformes/fisiologiaRESUMO
Parasites are known to exert selective pressures on host life history traits since the energy and nutrients needed to mount an immune response are no longer available to invest in other functions. Bird feathers harbour numerous microorganisms, some of which are able to degrade feather keratin (keratinolytic microorganisms) and affect feather integrity and colouration in vitro. Although named "feather-degrading" microorganisms, experimental evidence for their effects on feathers of free-living birds is still lacking. Here, we tested whether (i) keratinolytic microorganisms can degrade feathers in vivo and thus modify the colour of feathers during the nesting period and (ii) whether feather microorganisms have a long-term effect on the investment in colouration of newly moulted feathers. We designed treatments to either favour or inhibit bacterial growth, thus experimentally modifying plumage bacterial communities, in a wild breeding population of great tits (Parus major). Our analyses revealed no significant effects of the treatments on feather colours. Moreover, we found that differences in bacterial exposure during nesting did not significantly affect the colouration of newly moulted feathers. Our results suggest that significant feather degradation obtained during in vitro studies could have led to an overestimation of the potential of keratinolytic microorganisms to shape feather colouration in free-living birds.
Assuntos
Bactérias/metabolismo , Plumas/microbiologia , Passeriformes/microbiologia , Pigmentação/fisiologia , Animais , Feminino , Masculino , Microbiota , Fatores SexuaisRESUMO
During an infection, parasites face a succession of challenges, each decisive for disease outcome. The diversity of challenges requires a series of parasite adaptations to successfully multiply and transmit from host to host. Thus, the pathogen genotypes that succeed during one step might be counterselected in later stages of the infection. Using the bacterium Xenorhabdus nematophila and adult Drosophila melanogaster flies as hosts, we showed that such step-specific adaptations, here linked to GASP (i.e., growth advantage in stationary phase) mutations in the X. nematophila master gene regulator lrp, exist and can trade off with each other. We found that nonsense lrp mutations had lowered the ability to resist the host immune response, while all classes of mutations in lrp were associated with a decrease in the ability to proliferate during early infection. We demonstrate that reduced proliferation of X. nematophila best explains diminished virulence in this infection model. Finally, decreased proliferation during the first step of infection is accompanied by improved proliferation during late infection, suggesting a trade-off between the adaptations to each step. Step-specific adaptations could play a crucial role in the chronic phase of infections in any disease organisms that show similar small colony variants (SCVs) to X. nematophilaIMPORTANCE Within-host evolution has been described in many bacterial diseases, and the genetic basis behind the adaptations has stimulated a lot of interest. Yet, the studied adaptations are generally focused on antibiotic resistance and rarely on the adaptation to the environment given by the host, and the potential trade-offs hindering adaptations to each step of the infection are rarely considered. Those trade-offs are key to understanding intrahost evolution and thus the dynamics of the infection. However, understanding these trade-offs supposes a detailed study of host-pathogen interactions at each step of the infection process, with an adapted methodology for each step. Using Drosophila melanogaster as the host and the bacterium Xenorhabdus nematophila, we investigated the bacterial adaptations resulting from GASP mutations known to induce the small colony variant (SCV) phenotype positively selected within the host over the course of an infection, as well as the trade-off between step-specific adaptations.
Assuntos
Drosophila melanogaster/microbiologia , Mutação , Xenorhabdus/genética , Animais , Carga Bacteriana , Proteínas de Bactérias/genética , Proteínas de Bactérias/metabolismo , Regulação Bacteriana da Expressão Gênica , Interações Hospedeiro-Patógeno/fisiologia , Masculino , Fenótipo , Virulência/genéticaRESUMO
The host microbiota may have an impact on pathogens. This is often studied in laboratory-reared hosts but rarely in individuals whose microbiota looks like that of wild animals. In this study, we modified the gut microbiota of the insect Tenebrio molitor by rearing larvae in soil sampled from the field. We showed by high throughput sequencing methods that this treatment modifies the gut microbiota so that it is more diversified than that of laboratory-reared insects, and closely resembled the one of soil-dwelling insects. To describe what the entomopathogenic bacterial symbiont Xenorhabdus (Enterobacteriaceae), vectored by the soil-dwelling nematode Steinernema, might experience in natural conditions, we studied the infestation of the soil-reared T. molitor larvae with three Steinernema-Xenorhabdus pairs. We performed the infestation at 18°C, which delays the emergence of new infective juveniles (IJs), the soil-dwelling nematode forms, but which is a temperature compatible with natural infestation. We analyzed by high throughput sequencing methods the composition of the bacterial community within the insect cadavers before the first emergences of IJs. These bacterial communities were generally characterized by one or two non-symbiont taxa. Even for highly lethal Steinernema-Xenorhabdus pairs, the symbiont does not dominate the bacterial community within the insect cadaver.
Assuntos
Microbiota , Rabditídios/fisiologia , Xenorhabdus/fisiologia , Animais , Enterobacteriaceae/fisiologia , Larva/microbiologia , Solo , Simbiose , Tenebrio/microbiologiaRESUMO
Bacterial infections are often composed of cells with distinct phenotypes that can be produced by genetic or epigenetic mechanisms. This phenotypic heterogeneity has proved to be important in many pathogens, because it can alter both pathogenicity and transmission. We studied how and why it can emerge during infection in the bacterium Xenorhabdus nematophila, a pathogen that kills insects and multiplies in the cadaver before being transmitted by the soil nematode vector Steinernema carpocapsae We found that phenotypic variants cluster in three groups, one of which is composed of lrp defective mutants. These mutants, together with variants of another group, have in common that they maintain high survival during late stationary phase. This probably explains why they increase in frequency: variants of X. nematophila with a growth advantage in stationary phase (GASP) are under strong positive selection both in prolonged culture and in late infections. We also found that the within-host advantage of these variants seems to trade off against transmission by nematode vectors: the variants that reach the highest load in insects are those that are the least transmitted.IMPORTANCE Pathogens can evolve inside their host, and the importance of this mutation-fueled process is increasingly recognized. A disease outcome may indeed depend in part on pathogen adaptations that emerge during infection. It is therefore important to document these adaptations and the conditions that drive them. In our study, we took advantage of the possibility to monitor within-host evolution in the insect pathogen X. nematophila We demonstrated that selection occurring in aged infection favors lrp defective mutants, because these metabolic mutants benefit from a growth advantage in stationary phase (GASP). We also demonstrated that these mutants have reduced virulence and impaired transmission, modifying the infection outcome. Beyond the specific case of X. nematophila, we propose that metabolic mutants are to be found in other bacterial pathogens that stay for many generations inside their host.
Assuntos
Variação Biológica da População , Variação Genética , Infecções por Bactérias Gram-Negativas/veterinária , Insetos Vetores/microbiologia , Microbiota , Rabditídios/microbiologia , Xenorhabdus/fisiologia , Animais , Infecções por Bactérias Gram-Negativas/microbiologia , Mutação , Seleção Genética , Xenorhabdus/classificação , Xenorhabdus/genéticaRESUMO
We combined spectrophotometry and an original statistical approach to infer bacteria virulence, using the lepidoptera Galleria mellonella as a host model. With this method, it is possible to use a microplate reader to automatize data collection on host survival on batches of 96 samples. The method also allows measurement of pathogen multiplication if GFP labelled bacterial strains are used.