Grange Zoë L, Gartrell Brett D, Biggs Patrick J, Nelson Nicola J, Anderson Marti, French Nigel P
Allan Wilson Centre for Molecular Ecology and Evolution, Institute of Veterinary, Animal and Biomedical Sciences, Massey University, Palmerston North, New Zealand.
mEpiLab, Infectious Disease Research Centre, Hopkirk Research Institute, Institute of Veterinary, Animal and Biomedical Sciences, Massey University, Palmerston North, New Zealand.
Microb Ecol. 2016 May;71(4):1020-9. doi: 10.1007/s00248-015-0721-5. Epub 2015 Dec 26.
Isolation of wildlife into fragmented populations as a consequence of anthropogenic-mediated environmental change may alter host-pathogen relationships. Our understanding of some of the epidemiological features of infectious disease in vulnerable populations can be enhanced by the use of commensal bacteria as a proxy for invasive pathogens in natural ecosystems. The distinctive population structure of a well-described meta-population of a New Zealand endangered flightless bird, the takahe (Porphyrio hochstetteri), provided a unique opportunity to investigate the influence of host isolation on enteric microbial diversity. The genomic epidemiology of a prevalent rail-associated endemic commensal bacterium was explored using core genome and ribosomal multilocus sequence typing (rMLST) of 70 Campylobacter sp. nova 1 isolated from one third of the takahe population resident in multiple locations. While there was evidence of recombination between lineages, bacterial divergence appears to have occurred and multivariate analysis of 52 rMLST genes revealed location-associated differentiation of C. sp. nova 1 sequence types. Our results indicate that fragmentation and anthropogenic manipulation of populations can influence host-microbial relationships, with potential implications for niche adaptation and the evolution of micro-organisms in remote environments. This study provides a novel framework in which to explore the complex genomic epidemiology of micro-organisms in wildlife populations.
由于人为介导的环境变化,野生动物被隔离成碎片化种群,这可能会改变宿主与病原体的关系。在自然生态系统中,通过使用共生细菌作为入侵病原体的替代物,可以加深我们对脆弱种群中传染病一些流行病学特征的理解。新西兰濒危不会飞的鸟类——南秧鸡(Porphyrio hochstetteri),其一个描述详尽的集合种群具有独特的种群结构,这为研究宿主隔离对肠道微生物多样性的影响提供了独特机会。利用从多个地点居住的三分之一南秧鸡种群中分离出的70株弯曲杆菌新种1的核心基因组和核糖体多位点序列分型(rMLST),探索了一种常见的与秧鸡相关的地方性共生细菌的基因组流行病学。虽然有证据表明谱系之间存在重组,但细菌分化似乎已经发生,对52个rMLST基因的多变量分析揭示了新种弯曲杆菌1序列类型的位置相关分化。我们的结果表明,种群的碎片化和人为操纵会影响宿主与微生物的关系,对偏远环境中微生物的生态位适应和进化具有潜在影响。这项研究提供了一个新的框架,用于探索野生动物种群中微生物复杂的基因组流行病学。