Diversity-Stability Dynamics of the Amphibian Skin Microbiome and Susceptibility to a Lethal Viral Pathogen

被引:61
作者
Harrison, Xavier A. [1 ,2 ]
Price, Stephen J. [1 ,3 ]
Hopkins, Kevin [1 ]
Leung, William T. M. [1 ]
Sergeant, Chris [1 ]
Garner, Trenton W. J. [1 ]
机构
[1] Zool Soc London, Inst Zool, London, England
[2] Univ Exeter, Ctr Ecol & Conservat, Exeter, Devon, England
[3] UCL, UCL Genet Inst, London, England
关键词
amphibian conservation; microbiome stability; host-microbe interactions; amphibian disease; ranavirus; FV3-like ranavirus; BATRACHOCHYTRIUM-DENDROBATIDIS; RANAVIRUS INFECTION; R PACKAGE; FROGS; MORTALITY; COMMUNITIES; POPULATIONS; MORBIDITY; SELECTION; EPIDEMIC;
D O I
10.3389/fmicb.2019.02883
中图分类号
Q93 [微生物学];
学科分类号
071005 ; 100705 ;
摘要
Variation among animals in their host-associated microbial communities is increasingly recognized as a key determinant of important life history traits including growth, metabolism, and resistance to disease. Quantitative estimates of the factors shaping the stability of host microbiomes over time at the individual level in non-model organisms are scarce. Addressing this gap in our knowledge is important, as variation among individuals in microbiome stability may represent temporal gain or loss of key microbial species and functions linked to host health and/or fitness. Here we use controlled experiments to investigate how both heterogeneity in microbial species richness of the environment and exposure to the emerging pathogen Ranavirus influence the structure and temporal dynamics of the skin microbiome in a vertebrate host, the European common frog (Rana temporaria). Our evidence suggests that altering the bacterial species richness of the environment drives divergent temporal microbiome dynamics of the amphibian skin. Exposure to ranavirus effects changes in skin microbiome structure irrespective of total microbial diversity, but individuals with higher pre-exposure skin microbiome diversity appeared to exhibit higher survival. Higher diversity skin microbiomes also appear less stable over time compared to lower diversity microbiomes, but stability of the 100 most abundant ("core") community members was similar irrespective of microbiome richness. Our study highlights the importance of extrinsic factors in determining the stability of host microbiomes over time, which may in turn have important consequences for the stability of host-microbe interactions and microbiome-fitness correlations.
引用
收藏
页数:13
相关论文
共 96 条
[1]  
Allender MC, 2013, HERPETOL CONSERV BIO, V8, P308
[2]  
[Anonymous], BIORXIV
[3]  
[Anonymous], MICROB ECOL
[4]   Rare gut microbiota associated with breeding success, hormone metabolites and ovarian cycle phase in the critically endangered eastern black rhino [J].
Antwis, Rachael E. ;
Edwards, Katie L. ;
Unwin, Bryony ;
Walker, Susan L. ;
Shultz, Susanne .
MICROBIOME, 2019, 7 (1)
[5]   Probiotic consortia are not uniformly effective against different amphibian chytrid pathogen isolates [J].
Antwis, Rachael E. ;
Harrison, Xavier A. .
MOLECULAR ECOLOGY, 2018, 27 (02) :577-589
[6]   Ranavirus in wild edible frogs Pelophylax kl. esculentus in Denmark [J].
Ariel, Ellen ;
Kielgast, Jos ;
Svart, Hans Erik ;
Larsen, Knud ;
Tapiovaara, Hannele ;
Jensen, Britt Bang ;
Holopainen, Riikka .
DISEASES OF AQUATIC ORGANISMS, 2009, 85 (01) :7-14
[7]  
Barton K., 2009, MuMIn: multi-model inference
[8]   Fast and Elegant Numerical Linear Algebra Using the RcppEigen Package [J].
Bates, Douglas ;
Eddelbuettel, Dirk .
JOURNAL OF STATISTICAL SOFTWARE, 2013, 52 (05) :1-24
[9]   Amphibian chytridiomycosis outbreak dynamics are linked with host skin bacterial community structure [J].
Bates, Kieran A. ;
Clare, Frances C. ;
O'Hanlon, Simon ;
Bosch, Jaime ;
Brookes, Lola ;
Hopkins, Kevin ;
McLaughlin, Emilia J. ;
Daniel, Olivia ;
Garner, Trenton W. J. ;
Fisher, Matthew C. ;
Harrison, Xavier A. .
NATURE COMMUNICATIONS, 2018, 9
[10]   Land cover and forest connectivity alter the interactions among host, pathogen and skin microbiome [J].
Becker, C. G. ;
Longo, A. V. ;
Haddad, C. F. B. ;
Zamudio, K. R. .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 2017, 284 (1861)