Jarquín-Díaz Víctor Hugo, Ferreira Susana Carolina Martins, Balard Alice, Ďureje Ľudovít, Macholán Milos, Piálek Jaroslav, Bengtsson-Palme Johan, Kramer-Schadt Stephanie, Forslund-Startceva Sofia Kirke, Heitlinger Emanuel
Max-Delbrück-Center for Molecular Medicine in the Helmholtz Association (MDC). Robert-Rössle-Str. 10, 13125 Berlin, Germany.
Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research (IZW), Alfred-Kowalke-Straße 17, 10315, Berlin, Germany.
ISME Commun. 2024 Apr 15;4(1):ycae053. doi: 10.1093/ismeco/ycae053. eCollection 2024 Jan.
Antibiotic resistance is a priority public health problem resulting from eco-evolutionary dynamics within microbial communities and their interaction at a mammalian host interface or geographical scale. The links between mammalian host genetics, bacterial gut community, and antimicrobial resistance gene (ARG) content must be better understood in natural populations inhabiting heterogeneous environments. Hybridization, the interbreeding of genetically divergent populations, influences different components of the gut microbial communities. However, its impact on bacterial traits such as antibiotic resistance is unknown. Here, we present that hybridization might shape bacterial communities and ARG occurrence. We used amplicon sequencing to study the gut microbiome and to predict ARG composition in natural populations of house mice (). We compared gastrointestinal bacterial and ARG diversity, composition, and abundance across a gradient of pure and hybrid genotypes in the European House Mouse Hybrid Zone. We observed an increased overall predicted richness of ARG in hybrid mice. We found bacteria-ARG interactions by their co-abundance and detected phenotypes of extreme abundances in hybrid mice at the level of specific bacterial taxa and ARGs, mainly multidrug resistance genes. Our work suggests that mammalian host genetic variation impacts the gut microbiome and chromosomal ARGs. However, it raises further questions on how the mammalian host genetics impact ARGs via microbiome dynamics or environmental covariates.
抗生素耐药性是一个优先关注的公共卫生问题,它源于微生物群落内部的生态进化动态及其在哺乳动物宿主界面或地理尺度上的相互作用。在栖息于异质环境的自然种群中,必须更好地理解哺乳动物宿主遗传学、肠道细菌群落和抗生素耐药基因(ARG)含量之间的联系。杂交,即基因不同的种群间的杂交,会影响肠道微生物群落的不同组成部分。然而,其对诸如抗生素耐药性等细菌特性的影响尚不清楚。在此,我们提出杂交可能会塑造细菌群落和ARG的出现情况。我们使用扩增子测序来研究家鼠自然种群的肠道微生物组并预测ARG组成。我们比较了欧洲家鼠杂交带中纯合和杂交基因型梯度下的胃肠道细菌和ARG多样性、组成及丰度。我们观察到杂交小鼠中ARG的总体预测丰富度有所增加。我们通过共丰度发现了细菌与ARG的相互作用,并在特定细菌类群和ARG水平上检测到杂交小鼠中极端丰度的表型,主要是多药耐药基因。我们的研究表明,哺乳动物宿主的遗传变异会影响肠道微生物组和染色体上的ARG。然而,这也引发了关于哺乳动物宿主遗传学如何通过微生物组动态或环境协变量影响ARG的进一步问题。