Down for the count: Cryptosporidium infection depletes the gut microbiome in Coquerel's sifakas.

Microbial Ecology in Health and Disease Pub Date : 2017-06-15 eCollection Date: 2017-01-01 DOI:10.1080/16512235.2017.1335165
Erin A McKenney, Lydia K Greene, Christine M Drea, Anne D Yoder
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引用次数: 43

Abstract

Background: The gut microbiome (GMB) is the first line of defense against enteric pathogens, which are a leading cause of disease and mortality worldwide. One such pathogen, the protozoan Cryptosporidium, causes a variety of digestive disorders that can be devastating and even lethal. The Coquerel's sifaka (Propithecus coquereli) - an endangered, folivorous primate endemic to Madagascar - is precariously susceptible to cryptosporidiosis under captive conditions. If left untreated, infection can rapidly advance to morbidity and death. Objective: To gain a richer understanding of the pathophysiology of this pathogen while also improving captive management of endangered species, we examine the impact of cryptosporidiosis on the GMB of a flagship species known to experience a debilitating disease state upon infection. Design: Using 16S sequencing of DNA extracted from sifaka fecal samples, we compared the microbial communities of healthy sifakas to those of infected individuals, across infection and recovery periods. Results: Over the course of infection, we found that the sifaka GMB responds with decreased microbial diversity and increased community dissimilarity. Compared to the GMB of unaffected individuals, as well as during pre-infection and recovery periods, the GMB during active infection was enriched for microbial taxa associated with dysbiosis and rapid transit time. Time to recovery was inversely related to age, with young animals being slowest to recover GMB diversity and full community membership. Antimicrobial treatment during infection caused a significant depletion in GMB diversity. Conclusions: Although individual sifakas show unique trajectories of microbial loss and recolonization in response to infection, recovering sifakas exhibit remarkably consistent patterns, similar to initial community assembly of the GMB in infants. This observation, in particular, provides biological insight into the rules by which the GMB recovers from the disease state. Fecal transfaunation may prove effective in restoring a healthy GMB in animals with specialized diets.

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计数下降:隐孢子虫感染耗尽了Coquerel的狐猴的肠道微生物群。
背景:肠道微生物群(GMB)是抵御肠道病原体的第一道防线,肠道病原体是世界范围内疾病和死亡的主要原因。其中一种病原体是原生动物隐孢子虫,它会引起各种消化系统疾病,这些疾病可能是毁灭性的,甚至是致命的。Coquerel的狐猴(prothecus coquereli)是马达加斯加特有的一种濒临灭绝的四食性灵长类动物,在圈养条件下极易感染隐孢子虫病。如果不及时治疗,感染可迅速发展为发病和死亡。目的:为了更深入地了解这种病原体的病理生理学,同时改善濒危物种的圈养管理,我们研究了隐孢子虫病对一种已知的旗舰物种的GMB的影响,这种物种在感染后会经历一种衰弱的疾病状态。设计:利用从狐猴粪便样本中提取的DNA进行16S测序,我们比较了健康狐猴和感染狐猴在感染和恢复期间的微生物群落。结果:在感染过程中,我们发现狐猴GMB的微生物多样性下降,群落差异增加。与未受感染个体以及感染前和恢复期的GMB相比,活跃感染期间的GMB丰富了与生态失调和快速传播时间相关的微生物类群。恢复时间与年龄成反比,幼龄动物恢复GMB多样性和完全社区成员资格的速度最慢。感染期间的抗菌治疗导致GMB多样性显著减少。结论:尽管个体狐猴在感染反应中表现出独特的微生物损失和重新定植轨迹,但恢复中的狐猴表现出非常一致的模式,类似于婴儿中GMB的初始群落组装。特别是,这一观察提供了对GMB从疾病状态中恢复的生物学规律的见解。粪便移植可能被证明在特殊饮食的动物中恢复健康的GMB是有效的。
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