Effect of environmental factors and an emerging parasitic disease on gut microbiome of wild salmonid fish
Marko Visse; Anti Vasemägi; Veljo Kisand
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe2021042718813
Tiivistelmä
The gastrointestinal tract (GIT) of fish supports a dynamic microbial ecosystem
that is intimately linked to host nutrient acquisition, epithelial development,
immune system priming, and disease prevention, and we are far from understanding
the complex interactions among parasites, symbiotic gut bacteria, and host fitness.
Here, we analyzed the effects of environmental factors and parasitic burdens on the
microbial composition and diversity within the GIT of the brown trout (Salmo trutta).
We focused on the emerging dangerous salmonid myxozoan parasite Tetracapsuloides
bryosalmonae, which causes proliferative kidney disease in salmonid fish, to
demonstrate the potential role of GIT micobiomes in the modulation of host-parasite
relationships. The microbial diversity in the GIT displayed clear clustering according
to the river of origin, while considerable variation was also found among fish from
the same river. Environmental variables such as oxygen concentration, water temperature,
and river morphometry strongly associated with both the river microbial
community and the GIT microbiome, supporting the role of the environment in microbial
assemblage and the relative insignificance of the host genotype and gender.
Contrary to expectations, the parasite load exhibited a significant positive relationship
with the richness of the GIT microbiome. Many operational taxonomic units
(OTUs; n 202) are more abundant in T. bryosalmonae-infected fish, suggesting that
brown trout with large parasite burdens are prone to lose their GIT microbiome homeostasis.
The OTUs with the strongest increase in infected trout are mostly nonpathogenic
aquatic, anaerobic sediment/sludge, or ruminant bacteria. Our results underscore
the significance of the interactions among parasitic disease, abiotic factors,
and the GIT microbiome in disease etiology.
IMPORTANCE Cohabiting microorganisms play diverse and important roles in the
biology of multicellular hosts, but their diversity and interactions with abiotic and biotic
factors remain largely unsurveyed. Nevertheless, it is becoming increasingly
clear that many properties of host phenotypes reflect contributions from the associated
microbiome. We focus on a question of how parasites, the host genetic background,
and abiotic factors influence the microbiome in salmonid hosts by using a
host-parasite model consisting of wild brown trout (Salmo trutta) and the myxozoan
Tetracapsuloides bryosalmonae, which causes widely distributed proliferative kidney
disease. We show that parasite infection increases the frequency of bacteria from
the surrounding river water community, reflecting impaired homeostasis in the fish
gut. Our results also demonstrate the importance of abiotic environmental factors
and host size in the assemblage of the gut microbiome of fish and the relative insignificance
of the host genotype and gender.
Kokoelmat
- Rinnakkaistallenteet [19207]