Department of Marine Biotechnology and Resources, National Sun Yet-Sen University, Kaohsiung, Taiwan, Republic of China.
mSphere. 2022 Aug 31;7(4):e0019422. doi: 10.1128/msphere.00194-22. Epub 2022 Jun 29.
Bacterial pathogens are well equipped to adhere to and initiate infection in teleost fish. Fish skin mucus serves as the first barrier against environmental pathogens. The mucus harbors commensal microbes that impact host physiological and immunological responses. However, how the skin mucosal microbiota responds to the presence of pathogens remains largely unexplored. Thus, little is known about the status of skin mucus prior to infection with noticeable symptoms. In this study, we investigated the interactions between pathogens and the skin mucosal microbiota as well as the fish skin immune responses in the presence of pathogens. Striped catfish (Pangasianodon hypophthalmus) were challenged with different concentrations of the bacterial pathogen Aeromonas hydrophila (AH), and the skin immune response and the mucosal microbiota were examined by quantitative PCR (qPCR) and 16S rRNA gene sequence analysis. We determined that the pathogen concentration needed to stimulate the skin immune response was associated with significant mucosal microbiota changes, and we reconfirmed these observations using an fish skin model. Further analysis indicated that changes in the microbiota were attributed to a significant increase in opportunistic pathogens over AH. We concluded that the presence and increase of AH result in dysbiosis of the mucosal microbiota that can stimulate skin immune responses. We believe that our work sheds light on host-pathogen-commensal microbiota interactions and therefore contributes to aquaculture fish health. The fish skin mucosal microbiota is essential in modulating the host response to the presence of pathogens. Our study provides a platform to study both the correlation and causation of the interactions among the pathogen, fish skin, and the skin mucosal microbiota. Based on these findings, we provide the first mechanistic information on how mucosal microbiota changes induced by the pathogen AH result in skin disturbance with immune stimulation in striped catfish in the natural state and a potential direction for early-infection screening. Thus, this study is highly significant in the prevention of fish disease.
细菌病原体能够很好地黏附并引发鱼类感染。鱼类皮肤黏液是抵御环境病原体的第一道屏障。黏液中栖息着共生微生物,它们影响宿主的生理和免疫反应。然而,皮肤黏膜微生物群对病原体存在的反应方式在很大程度上仍未得到探索。因此,在出现明显症状之前,人们对皮肤黏液的状态知之甚少。在这项研究中,我们研究了病原体与皮肤黏膜微生物群之间的相互作用以及鱼类在存在病原体时的皮肤免疫反应。我们用不同浓度的细菌病原体嗜水气单胞菌(Aeromonas hydrophila,AH)挑战条纹𬶐(Pangasianodon hypophthalmus),并通过定量 PCR(qPCR)和 16S rRNA 基因序列分析来检测皮肤免疫反应和黏膜微生物群。我们发现,刺激皮肤免疫反应所需的病原体浓度与黏膜微生物群的显著变化有关,我们使用鱼类皮肤模型进一步证实了这一观察结果。进一步的分析表明,微生物群的变化归因于 AH 中机会性病原体的显著增加。我们得出结论,AH 的存在和增加导致黏膜微生物群的失调,从而刺激皮肤免疫反应。我们相信,我们的工作阐明了宿主-病原体-共生微生物群之间的相互作用,因此为水产养殖鱼类健康做出了贡献。鱼类皮肤黏膜微生物群在调节宿主对病原体存在的反应中起着至关重要的作用。我们的研究为研究病原体、鱼类皮肤和皮肤黏膜微生物群之间的相互作用的相关性和因果关系提供了一个平台。基于这些发现,我们提供了关于 AH 诱导的黏膜微生物群变化如何导致皮肤紊乱和免疫刺激的第一个机制信息,这为条纹𬶐在自然状态下的早期感染筛选提供了一个潜在的方向。因此,这项研究在鱼类疾病的预防方面具有重要意义。