Kim Dan, Pérez-Carrascal Olga Maria, DeSousa Catherin, Jung Da Kyung, Bohley Seneca, Wijaya Lila, Trang Kenneth, Khoury Sarah, Shapira Michael
Department of Integrative Biology, University of California, Berkeley, CA, USA.
bioRxiv. 2023 Jun 23:2023.06.21.545768. doi: 10.1101/2023.06.21.545768.
Human activity is altering the environment in a rapid pace, challenging the adaptive capacities of genetic variation within animal populations. Animals also harbor extensive gut microbiomes, which play diverse roles in host health and fitness and may help expanding host capabilities. The unprecedented scale of human usage of xenobiotics and contamination with environmental toxins describes one challenge against which bacteria with their immense biochemical diversity would be useful, by increasing detoxification capacities. To explore the potential of bacteria-assisted rapid adaptation, we used worms harboring a defined microbiome, and neomycin as a model toxin, harmful for the worm host and neutralized to different extents by some microbiome members. Worms raised in the presence of neomycin showed delayed development and decreased survival but were protected when colonized by neomycin-resistant members of the microbiome. Two distinct mechanisms facilitated this protection: gut enrichment driven by altered bacterial competition for the strain best capable of modifying neomycin; and host avoidance behavior, which depended on the conserved JNK homolog KGB-1, enabling preference and acquisition of neomycin-protective bacteria. We further tested the consequences of adaptation, considering that enrichment for protective strains may represent dysbiosis. We found that neomycin-adapted gut microbiomes caused increased susceptibility to infection as well as an increase in gut lipid storage, suggesting metabolic remodeling. Our proof-of-concept experiments support the feasibility of bacteria-assisted host adaptation and suggest that it may be prevalent. The results also highlight trade-offs between toxin adaptation and other traits of fitness.
人类活动正在迅速改变环境,对动物种群内遗传变异的适应能力构成挑战。动物还拥有广泛的肠道微生物群,它们在宿主健康和适应性方面发挥着多种作用,可能有助于扩展宿主能力。人类使用异生素的规模空前,以及环境毒素的污染,这是一个挑战,而具有巨大生化多样性的细菌通过提高解毒能力可能会有所帮助。为了探索细菌辅助快速适应的潜力,我们使用了携带特定微生物群的蠕虫,并将新霉素作为一种模型毒素,它对蠕虫宿主有害,但一些微生物群成员能不同程度地将其中和。在新霉素存在的情况下饲养的蠕虫发育延迟且存活率降低,但当被微生物群中对新霉素有抗性的成员定殖时则受到保护。有两种不同的机制促成了这种保护:由改变细菌对最能修饰新霉素的菌株的竞争驱动的肠道富集;以及宿主回避行为,这取决于保守的JNK同源物KGB-1,使宿主能够偏好并获得对新霉素有保护作用的细菌。考虑到保护性菌株的富集可能代表生态失调,我们进一步测试了适应的后果。我们发现,适应新霉素的肠道微生物群会导致对感染的易感性增加以及肠道脂质储存增加,这表明存在代谢重塑。我们的概念验证实验支持了细菌辅助宿主适应的可行性,并表明这种情况可能很普遍。研究结果还突出了毒素适应与其他适应性特征之间的权衡。