APC Microbiome Ireland, Bioscience Building, University College Cork, Ireland.
Institute of Integrative Biology, ETH Zürich, Switzerland.
Infect Genet Evol. 2019 Sep;73:425-432. doi: 10.1016/j.meegid.2019.05.021. Epub 2019 May 30.
Although host and parasites are typically embedded in complex abiotic and biotic environments our understanding of how environmental variation impacts on host-parasite interactions, including antagonistic coevolution (AC) is poorly understood. Nonetheless, previous studies using bacteria and bacteriophages have shown that variation in just one abiotic parameter can have profound effects not only on the type of AC dynamics observed but also the time-frames over which AC interactions can persist. Here, we investigated the effect of an important component of the abiotic human gut environment, bile salts, on AC dynamics between the bacterium Escherichia coli and the lytic phage PP01 in an in vitro model system. In the absence of bile salts E.coli and PP01 coevolved in a manner that is consistent with a directional arms race dynamic (ARD), with bacteria and phages evolving increasing resistance and infectivity ranges through time. However, in the presence of bile salts, evidence of directional coevolution was weaker and more variable across replicate communities. These effects may be explained, in part, by the negative effect of bile salts on both host and parasite population sizes; lower population sizes for both bacteria and phages will reduce encounter rates which in turn could mitigate the benefits of generalism in both host and parasite resistance and infectivity ranges that are observed for ARDs. The negative effect of bile salts on phage population size may also be partially independent of host population size as bile salts was found to negatively impact phage viability in the absence of bacteria, as well as reducing phage adsorption efficiency. Differences in bacterial morphological diversity between treatments were also noted, with the emergence of mucoid colonies in both bile salts and non-bile salts treatments but only in the presence of phages. These data contribute to the growing body of knowledge on how environmental variation can impact on interactions between hosts and parasites. More specifically, these results are particularly relevant to our understanding of how bacteria-phage interactions may be affected by different abiotic factors relevant to the complex environment of the human gut and have clear implications for the development of phage as therapeutics to target members of the gut microbiota and/or intestinal pathogens.
尽管宿主和寄生虫通常嵌入在复杂的非生物和生物环境中,但我们对环境变化如何影响宿主-寄生虫相互作用,包括拮抗协同进化(AC)的理解还很有限。尽管如此,先前使用细菌和噬菌体的研究表明,仅一个非生物参数的变化不仅会对观察到的 AC 动态类型产生深远影响,还会对 AC 相互作用持续的时间范围产生深远影响。在这里,我们在体外模型系统中研究了非生物人类肠道环境的一个重要组成部分——胆汁盐对细菌大肠杆菌和溶菌噬菌体 PP01 之间 AC 动态的影响。在没有胆汁盐的情况下,大肠杆菌和 PP01 协同进化的方式与定向军备竞赛动态(ARD)一致,随着时间的推移,细菌和噬菌体的抗药性和感染性范围不断增加。然而,在存在胆汁盐的情况下,定向协同进化的证据在重复群落中较弱且更具变异性。这些影响部分可以通过胆汁盐对宿主和寄生虫种群大小的负面影响来解释;细菌和噬菌体的种群数量减少会降低两者之间的接触频率,从而减少宿主和寄生虫抗药性和感染性范围的普遍性带来的益处,这些益处是 ARD 观察到的。胆汁盐对噬菌体种群大小的负面影响也可能部分独立于宿主种群大小,因为在没有细菌的情况下,胆汁盐会对噬菌体的生存能力产生负面影响,并降低噬菌体的吸附效率。处理之间的细菌形态多样性差异也很明显,在胆汁盐和非胆汁盐处理中都出现了黏液样菌落,但只有在噬菌体存在的情况下才会出现。这些数据有助于增加我们对环境变化如何影响宿主和寄生虫之间相互作用的认识。更具体地说,这些结果对于我们理解细菌-噬菌体相互作用如何受到与人类肠道复杂环境相关的不同非生物因素的影响特别重要,并且对噬菌体作为治疗剂靶向肠道微生物群和/或肠道病原体成员具有明确的意义。