Egan Suhelen, Gardiner Melissa
Centre for Marine Bio-Innovation, School of Biological, Earth and Environmental Sciences, The University of New South Wales, Sydney NSW, Australia.
Front Microbiol. 2016 Jun 21;7:991. doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2016.00991. eCollection 2016.
With growing environmental pressures placed on our marine habitats there is concern that the prevalence and severity of diseases affecting marine organisms will increase. Yet relative to terrestrial systems, we know little about the underlying causes of many of these diseases. Moreover, factors such as saprophytic colonizers and a lack of baseline data on healthy individuals make it difficult to accurately assess the role of specific microbial pathogens in disease states. Emerging evidence in the field of medicine suggests that a growing number of human diseases result from a microbiome imbalance (or dysbiosis), questioning the traditional view of a singular pathogenic agent. Here we discuss the possibility that many diseases seen in marine systems are, similarly, the result of microbial dysbiosis and the rise of opportunistic or polymicrobial infections. Thus, understanding and managing disease in the future will require us to also rethink definitions of disease and pathogenesis for marine systems. We suggest that a targeted, multidisciplinary approach that addresses the questions of microbial symbiosis in both healthy and diseased states, and at that the level of the holobiont, will be key to progress in this area.
随着我们的海洋栖息地面临的环境压力不断增加,人们担心影响海洋生物的疾病的流行程度和严重程度将会上升。然而,相对于陆地系统,我们对许多这类疾病的根本原因知之甚少。此外,诸如腐生定植菌等因素以及缺乏关于健康个体的基线数据,使得难以准确评估特定微生物病原体在疾病状态中的作用。医学领域新出现的证据表明,越来越多的人类疾病是由微生物组失衡(或生态失调)导致的,这对单一病原体的传统观点提出了质疑。在此,我们讨论这样一种可能性,即海洋系统中出现的许多疾病同样是微生物生态失调以及机会性或多微生物感染增加的结果。因此,未来对疾病的理解和管理将要求我们重新思考海洋系统中疾病和发病机制的定义。我们认为,一种有针对性的多学科方法,即解决健康和患病状态下以及全生物水平的微生物共生问题,将是该领域取得进展的关键。