Department of Biology, University of Massachusetts Boston, 100 Morrissey Blvd., Boston, MA 02125, USA
Zoological Institute, Technische Universität Braunschweig, Braunschweig 38106, Germany.
Proc Biol Sci. 2018 Aug 22;285(1885):20180758. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2018.0758.
Escalating occurrences of emerging infectious diseases underscore the importance of understanding microbiome-pathogen interactions. The amphibian cutaneous microbiome is widely studied for its potential to mitigate disease-mediated amphibian declines. Other microbial interactions in this system, however, have been largely neglected in the context of disease outbreaks. European fire salamanders have suffered dramatic population crashes as a result of the newly emerged (). In this paper, we investigate microbial interactions on multiple fronts within this system. We show that wild, healthy fire salamanders maintain complex skin microbiotas containing -inhibitory members, but these community are present at a remarkably low abundance. Through experimentation, we show that increasing bacterial densities of -inhibiting bacteria via daily addition slowed disease progression in fire salamanders. Additionally, we find that experimental- infection elicited subtle changes in the skin microbiome, with selected opportunistic bacteria increasing in relative abundance resulting in septicemic events that coincide with extensive destruction of the epidermis. These results suggest that fire salamander skin, in natural settings, maintains bacterial communities at numbers too low to confer sufficient protection against and, in fact, the native skin microbiota can constitute a source of opportunistic bacterial pathogens that contribute to pathogenesis. By shedding light on the complex interaction between the microbiome and a lethal pathogen, these data put the interplay between skin microbiomes and a wildlife disease into a new perspective.
新出现的传染病不断增多,突显了了解微生物组与病原体相互作用的重要性。由于其在减轻与疾病相关的两栖动物减少方面的潜力,两栖动物皮肤微生物组得到了广泛研究。然而,在疾病爆发的背景下,该系统中其他微生物的相互作用在很大程度上被忽视了。欧洲火蝾螈由于新出现的()而遭受了巨大的种群崩溃。在本文中,我们从多个方面研究了该系统中的微生物相互作用。我们表明,野生健康的火蝾螈维持着含有 - 抑制成员的复杂皮肤微生物群,但这些群落的丰度非常低。通过实验,我们表明,通过每天添加 - 抑制细菌来增加细菌密度可以减缓火蝾螈的疾病进展。此外,我们发现实验性感染会导致皮肤微生物组发生微妙变化,选择的机会性细菌相对丰度增加,导致败血性事件,同时表皮广泛破坏。这些结果表明,在自然环境中,火蝾螈的皮肤维持的细菌群落数量太少,无法提供足够的保护来抵御(),实际上,本地皮肤微生物组可以成为导致发病机制的机会性细菌病原体的来源。通过阐明微生物组与致命病原体之间的复杂相互作用,这些数据为皮肤微生物组与野生动物疾病之间的相互作用提供了新的视角。