Department of Oceanography, Center for Microbial Oceanography: Research and Education (CMORE), University of Hawai'i at Mànoa, Honolulu, HI, USA.
Pacific Biosciences Research Center, University of Hawai'i at Mànoa, Honolulu, HI, USA.
ISME J. 2021 Jun;15(6):1628-1640. doi: 10.1038/s41396-020-00875-w. Epub 2021 Feb 9.
Infectious pathogens can disrupt the microbiome in addition to directly affecting the host. Impacts of disease may be dependent on the ability of the microbiome to recover from such disturbance, yet remarkably little is known about microbiome recovery after disease, particularly in nonhuman animals. We assessed the resilience of the amphibian skin microbial community after disturbance by the pathogen, Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis (Bd). Skin microbial communities of laboratory-reared mountain yellow-legged frogs were tracked through three experimental phases: prior to Bd infection, after Bd infection (disturbance), and after clearing Bd infection (recovery period). Bd infection disturbed microbiome composition and altered the relative abundances of several dominant bacterial taxa. After Bd infection, frogs were treated with an antifungal drug that cleared Bd infection, but this did not lead to recovery of microbiome composition (measured as Unifrac distance) or relative abundances of dominant bacterial groups. These results indicate that Bd infection can lead to an alternate stable state in the microbiome of sensitive amphibians, or that microbiome recovery is extremely slow-in either case resilience is low. Furthermore, antifungal treatment and clearance of Bd infection had the additional effect of reducing microbial community variability, which we hypothesize results from similarity across frogs in the taxa that colonize community vacancies resulting from the removal of Bd. Our results indicate that the skin microbiota of mountain yellow-legged frogs has low resilience following Bd-induced disturbance and is further altered by the process of clearing Bd infection, which may have implications for the conservation of this endangered amphibian.
传染性病原体除了直接影响宿主外,还会破坏微生物组。疾病的影响可能取决于微生物组从这种干扰中恢复的能力,但人们对疾病后微生物组的恢复知之甚少,尤其是在非人类动物中。我们评估了病原体蛙壶菌(Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis,Bd)干扰后两栖动物皮肤微生物群落的恢复力。通过三个实验阶段跟踪实验室饲养的山黄腿蛙的皮肤微生物群落:在 Bd 感染之前、Bd 感染后(干扰)和 Bd 感染清除后(恢复期)。Bd 感染干扰了微生物群落组成,并改变了几种优势细菌类群的相对丰度。在 Bd 感染后,用抗真菌药物治疗清除了 Bd 感染,但这并没有导致微生物群落组成(以 Unifrac 距离衡量)或优势细菌群的相对丰度恢复。这些结果表明,Bd 感染可能导致敏感两栖动物的微生物组进入另一个稳定状态,或者微生物组的恢复非常缓慢——在任何一种情况下,恢复力都很低。此外,抗真菌治疗和 Bd 感染的清除还有额外的效果,降低了微生物群落的可变性,我们假设这是由于 Bd 去除导致的群落空缺中定植的类群在不同的青蛙之间存在相似性所致。我们的结果表明,山黄腿蛙的皮肤微生物组在 Bd 诱导的干扰后恢复力较低,并且在清除 Bd 感染的过程中进一步受到改变,这可能对这种濒危两栖动物的保护产生影响。