Koellsch Célia, Poulin Robert, Salloum Priscila M
Department of Zoology, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand.
Department of Zoology, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand.
Int J Parasitol. 2024 Dec;54(14):733-742. doi: 10.1016/j.ijpara.2024.08.005. Epub 2024 Aug 30.
The fast technological advances of molecular tools have enabled us to uncover a new dimension hidden within parasites and their hosts: their microbiomes. Increasingly, parasitologists characterise host microbiome changes in the face of parasitic infections, revealing the potential of these microscopic fast-evolving entities to influence host-parasite interactions. However, most of the changes in host microbiomes seem to depend on the host and parasite species in question. Furthermore, we should understand the relative role of parasitic infections as microbiome modulators when compared with other microbiome-impacting factors (e.g., host size, age, sex). Here, we characterised the microbiome of a single intermediate host species infected by two parasites belonging to different phyla: the acanthocephalan Plagiorhynchus allisonae and a dilepidid cestode, both infecting Transorchestia serrulata amphipods collected simultaneously from the same locality. We used the v4 hypervariable region of the 16S rRNA prokaryotic gene to identify the hemolymph bacterial community of uninfected, acanthocephalan-infected, and cestode-infected amphipods, as well as the bacteria in the amphipods' immediate environment and in the parasites infecting them. Our results show that parasitic infections were more strongly associated with differences in host bacterial community richness than amphipod size, presence of amphipod eggs in female amphipods, and even parasite load. Amphipods infected by acanthocephalans had the most divergent bacterial community, with a marked decrease in alpha diversity compared with cestode-infected and uninfected hosts. In accordance with the species-specific nature of microbiome changes in parasitic infections, we found unique microbial taxa associating with hosts infected by each parasite species, as well as taxa only shared between a parasite species and their infected hosts. However, there were some bacterial taxa detected in all parasitised amphipods (regardless of the parasite species), but not in uninfected amphipods or the environment. We propose that shared bacteria associated with all hosts parasitised by distantly related helminths may be important either in helping host defences or parasites' success, and could thus interact with host-parasite evolution.
它们的微生物群。越来越多的寄生虫学家对寄生虫感染情况下宿主微生物群的变化进行了表征,揭示了这些微观快速进化实体影响宿主 - 寄生虫相互作用的潜力。然而,宿主微生物群的大多数变化似乎取决于所讨论的宿主和寄生虫物种。此外,与其他影响微生物群的因素(如宿主大小、年龄、性别)相比,我们应该了解寄生虫感染作为微生物群调节剂的相对作用。在这里,我们对被两种不同门的寄生虫感染的单一中间宿主物种的微生物群进行了表征:棘头虫Allison棘吻虫和双叶绦虫,它们都感染了从同一地点同时采集的锯缘真跳虫。我们使用16S rRNA原核基因的v4高变区来鉴定未感染、棘头虫感染和绦虫感染的跳虫的血淋巴细菌群落,以及跳虫周围环境和感染它们的寄生虫中的细菌。我们的结果表明,与跳虫大小、雌性跳虫中跳虫卵的存在以及甚至寄生虫负荷相比,寄生虫感染与宿主细菌群落丰富度的差异更密切相关。被棘头虫感染的跳虫具有最不同的细菌群落,与被绦虫感染和未感染的宿主相比,α多样性显著降低。根据寄生虫感染中微生物群变化的物种特异性性质,我们发现了与每种寄生虫物种感染的宿主相关的独特微生物分类群,以及仅在一种寄生虫物种及其感染的宿主之间共享的分类群。然而,在所有被寄生的跳虫中都检测到了一些细菌分类群(无论寄生虫物种如何),但在未感染的跳虫或环境中未检测到。我们提出,与远缘蠕虫寄生的所有宿主相关的共享细菌可能在帮助宿主防御或寄生虫成功方面很重要,因此可能与宿主 - 寄生虫进化相互作用。