Lemire Astrid, Goudenège David, Versigny Typhaine, Petton Bruno, Calteau Alexandra, Labreuche Yannick, Le Roux Frédérique
1] Sorbonne Universités, UPMC Univ Paris 06, UMR 8227, Integrative Biology of Marine Models, Station Biologique de Roscoff, Roscoff, France [2] Ifremer, Unité Physiologie Fonctionnelle des Organismes Marins, ZI de la Pointe du Diable, Plouzané, France [3] CNRS UMR 8227, Integrative Biology of Marine Models, Station Biologique de Roscoff, Roscoff, France.
Ifremer, Unité Physiologie Fonctionnelle des Organismes Marins, ZI de la Pointe du Diable, Plouzané, France.
ISME J. 2015 Jul;9(7):1523-31. doi: 10.1038/ismej.2014.233. Epub 2014 Dec 9.
Disease in oysters has been steadily rising over the past decade, threatening the long-term survival of commercial and natural stocks. Our understanding and management of such diseases are of critical importance as aquaculture is an important aspect of dealing with the approaching worldwide food shortage. Although some bacteria of the Vibrio genus isolated from diseased oysters have been demonstrated to be pathogenic by experimental infection, direct causality has not been established. Little is known about the dynamics of how the bacterial population hosted by oysters changes during disease progression. Combining experimental ecology, a high-throughput infection assay and genome sequencing, we show that the onset of disease in oysters is associated with progressive replacement of diverse benign colonizers by members of a phylogenetically coherent virulent population. Although the virulent population is genetically diverse, all members of that population can cause disease. Comparative genomics across virulent and nonvirulent populations identified candidate virulence factors that were clustered in population-specific genomic regions. Genetic analyses revealed that one gene for a candidate virulent factor, a putative outer membrane protein, is necessary for infection of oysters. Finally, analyses of oyster mortality following experimental infection suggest that disease onset can be facilitated by the presence of nonvirulent strains. This is a new form of polymicrobial disease, in which nonpathogenic strains contribute to increase mortality.
在过去十年中,牡蛎疾病一直在稳步增加,威胁着商业养殖和自然种群的长期生存。鉴于水产养殖是应对即将到来的全球粮食短缺的一个重要方面,我们对这类疾病的理解和管理至关重要。虽然从患病牡蛎中分离出的一些弧菌属细菌已通过实验感染证明具有致病性,但尚未确定直接因果关系。对于疾病进展过程中牡蛎体内细菌种群的动态变化,人们了解甚少。结合实验生态学、高通量感染检测和基因组测序,我们发现牡蛎疾病的发生与一个系统发育相关的致病种群成员逐渐取代多种良性定殖菌有关。虽然致病种群在基因上具有多样性,但该种群的所有成员都能引发疾病。对致病和非致病种群的比较基因组学研究确定了聚集在种群特异性基因组区域的候选毒力因子。遗传分析表明,一个候选毒力因子基因,即一种假定的外膜蛋白,是感染牡蛎所必需的。最后,对实验感染后牡蛎死亡率的分析表明,无毒菌株的存在可能会促进疾病的发生。这是一种新形式的多微生物疾病,其中非致病菌株会导致死亡率增加。