Phylosymbiosis shapes skin bacterial communities and pathogen-protective function in Appalachian salamanders

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Phylosymbiosis shapes skin bacterial communities and pathogen-protective function in Appalachian salamanders. / Osborne, Owen; Jiménez, Randall; Byrne, Allison et al.
Yn: The ISME Journal, Cyfrol 18, Rhif 1, 11.06.2024.

Allbwn ymchwil: Cyfraniad at gyfnodolynErthygladolygiad gan gymheiriaid

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Osborne O, Jiménez R, Byrne A, Gratwicke B, Ellison A, Muletz-Wolz C. Phylosymbiosis shapes skin bacterial communities and pathogen-protective function in Appalachian salamanders. The ISME Journal. 2024 Meh 11;18(1). doi: 10.1093/ismejo/wrae104

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Osborne, Owen ; Jiménez, Randall ; Byrne, Allison et al. / Phylosymbiosis shapes skin bacterial communities and pathogen-protective function in Appalachian salamanders. Yn: The ISME Journal. 2024 ; Cyfrol 18, Rhif 1.

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TY - JOUR

T1 - Phylosymbiosis shapes skin bacterial communities and pathogen-protective function in Appalachian salamanders

AU - Osborne, Owen

AU - Jiménez, Randall

AU - Byrne, Allison

AU - Gratwicke, Brian

AU - Ellison, Amy

AU - Muletz-Wolz, Carly

N1 - The date on the issue is Jan 2024, but the item was published in June 2024

PY - 2024/6/11

Y1 - 2024/6/11

N2 - Phylosymbiosis is an association between host-associated microbiome composition and host phylogeny. This pattern can arise via the evolution of host traits, habitat preferences, diets, and the co-diversification of hosts and microbes. Understanding the drivers of phylosymbiosis is vital for modelling disease-microbiome interactions and manipulating microbiomes in multi-host systems. This study quantifies phylosymbiosis in Appalachian salamander skin in the context of infection by the fungal pathogen Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis (Bd), while accounting for environmental microbiome exposure. We sampled ten salamander species representing >150M years of divergence, assessed their Bd infection status, and analysed their skin and environmental microbiomes. Our results reveal a significant signal of phylosymbiosis, whereas the local environmental pool of microbes, climate, geography, and Bd infection load had a smaller impact. Host-microbe co-speciation was not evident, indicating that the effect stems from the evolution of host traits influencing microbiome assembly. Bd infection is correlated with host phylogeny and the abundance of Bd-inhibitory bacterial strains, suggesting that the long-term evolutionary dynamics between salamander hosts and their skin microbiomes affect the present-day distribution of the pathogen, along with habitat-linked exposure risk. Five Bd-inhibitory bacterial strains showed unusual generalism: occurring in most host species and habitats. These generalist strains may enhance the likelihood of probiotic manipulations colonising and persisting on hosts. Our results underscore the substantial influence of host-microbiome eco-evolutionary dynamics on environmental health and disease outcomes.

AB - Phylosymbiosis is an association between host-associated microbiome composition and host phylogeny. This pattern can arise via the evolution of host traits, habitat preferences, diets, and the co-diversification of hosts and microbes. Understanding the drivers of phylosymbiosis is vital for modelling disease-microbiome interactions and manipulating microbiomes in multi-host systems. This study quantifies phylosymbiosis in Appalachian salamander skin in the context of infection by the fungal pathogen Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis (Bd), while accounting for environmental microbiome exposure. We sampled ten salamander species representing >150M years of divergence, assessed their Bd infection status, and analysed their skin and environmental microbiomes. Our results reveal a significant signal of phylosymbiosis, whereas the local environmental pool of microbes, climate, geography, and Bd infection load had a smaller impact. Host-microbe co-speciation was not evident, indicating that the effect stems from the evolution of host traits influencing microbiome assembly. Bd infection is correlated with host phylogeny and the abundance of Bd-inhibitory bacterial strains, suggesting that the long-term evolutionary dynamics between salamander hosts and their skin microbiomes affect the present-day distribution of the pathogen, along with habitat-linked exposure risk. Five Bd-inhibitory bacterial strains showed unusual generalism: occurring in most host species and habitats. These generalist strains may enhance the likelihood of probiotic manipulations colonising and persisting on hosts. Our results underscore the substantial influence of host-microbiome eco-evolutionary dynamics on environmental health and disease outcomes.

KW - phylosymbiosis

KW - Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis

KW - Batrachochytrium salamandrivorans

KW - host-microbiome interactions

KW - community assembly

KW - probiotics

U2 - 10.1093/ismejo/wrae104

DO - 10.1093/ismejo/wrae104

M3 - Article

C2 - 38861457

VL - 18

JO - The ISME Journal

JF - The ISME Journal

SN - 1751-7362

IS - 1

ER -