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1.
Microbiol Res ; 242: 126641, 2021 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33191103

ABSTRACT

The pathogenic yeast strain LIAO causing the milky disease in the Chinese mitten crab belonged to one member of Metschnikowia bicuspidate which could grow well at different temperatures from 28 to 4 °C. It was also found that the pathogenic yeast strain LIAO could grow in the extracts of the muscle, gill, heart tissues, intestinal tracts of the healthy Chinese mitten crabs by using the reducing sugars, amino acids and other nutrients in them. Massoia lactone released from liamocins produced by Aureobasidium melanogenum had high anti-fungal activity against the pathogenic yeast strain LIAO and M. bicuspidate WCY isolated from the diseased marine crabs. The minimal inhibitory concentrations (MIC) and the minimal fungicidal concentration (MFC) in the liquid culture against the pathogenic yeast strain LIAO were 0.15 mg/mL and 0.34 mg/mL, respectively. Massoia lactone as a bio-surfactant could damage the cell membrane, even break the whole cells of the pathogenic yeast strain LIAO and cause cellular necrosis of the pathogenic yeast LIAO. Therefore, Massoia lactone could be used to effectively kill the pathogenic yeast strains and as an effectitve treatment for milky disease in the Chinese mitten crab.


Subject(s)
Animal Diseases/drug therapy , Antifungal Agents/pharmacology , Brachyura/microbiology , Lactones/pharmacology , Metschnikowia/drug effects , Animals , Antifungal Agents/therapeutic use , Aureobasidium , Base Sequence , Lactones/therapeutic use , Metschnikowia/genetics , Metschnikowia/pathogenicity , Microbial Sensitivity Tests , Necrosis , Phylogeny , Yeasts
2.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29531153

ABSTRACT

Anthropogenic resource supplementation can shape wildlife disease directly by altering the traits and densities of hosts and parasites or indirectly by stimulating prey, competitor or predator species. We first assess the direct epidemiological consequences of supplementation, highlighting the similarities and differences between food provisioning and two widespread forms of nutrient input: agricultural fertilization and aquatic nutrient enrichment. We then review an aquatic disease system and a general model to assess whether predator and competitor species can enhance or overturn the direct effects of enrichment. All forms of supplementation can directly affect epidemics by increasing host population size or altering parasite production within hosts, but food provisioning is most likely to aggregate hosts and increase parasite transmission. However, if predators or competitors increase in response to supplementation, they could alter resource-fuelled outbreaks in focal hosts. We recommend identifying the traits of hosts, parasites or interacting species that best predict epidemiological responses to supplementation and evaluating the relative importance of these direct and indirect mechanisms. Theory and experiments should examine the timing of behavioural, physiological and demographic changes for realistic, variable scenarios of supplementation. A more integrative view of resource supplementation and wildlife disease could yield broadly applicable disease management strategies.This article is part of the theme issue 'Anthropogenic resource subsidies and host-parasite dynamics in wildlife'.


Subject(s)
Daphnia/microbiology , Fish Diseases/epidemiology , Host-Pathogen Interactions , Models, Statistical , Mycoses/veterinary , Animals , Chlorophyta/microbiology , Competitive Behavior/physiology , Fish Diseases/microbiology , Fish Diseases/transmission , Fishes/microbiology , Fishes/physiology , Food Chain , Humans , Metschnikowia/growth & development , Metschnikowia/pathogenicity , Mycoses/epidemiology , Mycoses/microbiology , Mycoses/transmission , Predatory Behavior/physiology , Spores, Fungal/growth & development , Spores, Fungal/pathogenicity
3.
Mol Ecol ; 27(8): 2067-2076, 2018 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29446179

ABSTRACT

Both dispersal limitation and environmental sorting can affect genetic variation in populations, but their contribution remains unclear, particularly in microbes. We sought to determine the contribution of geographic distance (as a proxy for dispersal limitation) and phenotypic traits (as a proxy for environmental sorting), including morphology, metabolic ability and interspecific competitiveness, to the genotypic diversity in a nectar yeast species, Metschnikowia reukaufii. To measure genotypic diversity, we sequenced the genomes of 102 strains of M. reukaufii isolated from the floral nectar of hummingbird-pollinated shrub, Mimulus aurantiacus, along a 200-km coastline in California. Intraspecific genetic variation showed no detectable relationship with geographic distance, but could be grouped into three distinct lineages that correlated with metabolic ability and interspecific competitiveness. Despite ample evidence for strong competitive interactions within and among nectar yeasts, a full spectrum of the genotypic and phenotypic diversity observed across the 200-km coastline was represented even at a scale as small as 200 m. Further, more competitive strains were not necessarily more abundant. These results suggest that dispersal limitation and environmental sorting might not fully explain intraspecific diversity in this microbe and highlight the need to also consider other ecological factors such as trade-offs, source-sink dynamics and niche modification.


Subject(s)
Flowers/microbiology , Genetic Variation/genetics , Metschnikowia/genetics , Plant Nectar/genetics , Animals , Birds/physiology , California , Flowers/genetics , Genomics , Genotype , Metschnikowia/isolation & purification , Metschnikowia/pathogenicity , Phenotype , Pollination/genetics
4.
Parasitology ; 145(7): 939-947, 2018 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29160185

ABSTRACT

Temperature is expected to modulate the responses of organisms to stress. Here, we aimed to assess the influence of temperature on the interaction between parasitism and fungicide contamination. Specifically, using the cladoceran Daphnia as a model system, we explored the isolated and interactive effects of parasite challenge (yeast Metschnikowia bicuspidata) and exposure to fungicides (copper sulphate and tebuconazole) at two temperatures (17 and 20 °C), in a fully factorial design. Confirming a previous study, M. bicuspidata infection and copper exposure caused independent effects on Daphnia life history, whereas infection was permanently suppressed with tebuconazole exposure. Here, we show that higher temperature generally increased the virulence of the parasite, with the hosts developing signs of infection earlier, reproducing less and dying at an earlier age. These effects were consistent across copper concentrations, whereas the joint effects of temperature (which enhanced the difference between non-infected and infected hosts) and the anti-parasitic action of tebuconazole resulted in a more pronounced parasite × tebuconazole interaction at the higher temperature. Thus, besides independently influencing parasite and contaminant effects, the temperature can act as a modulator of interactions between pollution and disease.


Subject(s)
Daphnia/microbiology , Fungicides, Industrial/adverse effects , Host-Pathogen Interactions , Metschnikowia/pathogenicity , Temperature , Water Pollution/analysis , Animals , Copper Sulfate/pharmacology , Daphnia/drug effects , Fungicides, Industrial/pharmacology , Reproduction/drug effects , Triazoles/adverse effects , Triazoles/pharmacology , Virulence
5.
PLoS One ; 11(6): e0156119, 2016.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27280438

ABSTRACT

A yeast-like organism was isolated from the skin scraping sample of a stasis dermatitis patient in the Mycology Unit Department of Medical Microbiology, University Malaya Medical Centre (UMMC), Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. The isolate produced no pigment and was not identifiable using chromogenic agar and API 20C AUX. The fungus was identified as Metschnikowia sp. strain UM 1034, which is close to that of Metschnikowia drosophilae based on ITS- and D1/D2 domain-based phylogenetic analysis. However, the physiology of the strain was not associated to M. drosophilae. This pathogen exhibited low sensitivity to all tested azoles, echinocandins, 5-flucytosine and amphotericin B. This study provided insight into Metschnikowia sp. strain UM 1034 phenotype profiles using a Biolog phenotypic microarray (PM). The isolate utilized 373 nutrients of 760 nutrient sources and could adapt to a broad range of osmotic and pH environments. To our knowledge, this is the first report of the isolation of Metschnikowia non-pulcherrima sp. from skin scraping, revealing this rare yeast species as a potential human pathogen that may be misidentified as Candida sp. using conventional methods. Metschnikowia sp. strain UM 1034 can survive in flexible and diverse environments with a generalist lifestyle.


Subject(s)
Dermatitis/microbiology , Metschnikowia/isolation & purification , Metschnikowia/pathogenicity , Mycoses/microbiology , Skin/microbiology , Aged , Antifungal Agents/pharmacology , DNA, Fungal/genetics , DNA, Ribosomal/genetics , Humans , Male , Metschnikowia/classification , Metschnikowia/drug effects , Mycological Typing Techniques , Mycoses/complications , Mycoses/genetics , Phylogeny , Pigmentation , Sequence Analysis, DNA , Skin/drug effects , Skin/metabolism
6.
Bull Math Biol ; 78(2): 235-53, 2016 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26857380

ABSTRACT

The virulent effects of a pathogen on host fecundity and mortality (both intrinsic and extrinsic mortality due to predation) often increase with the age of infection. Age of infection often is also correlated with parasite fitness, in terms of the number of both infective propagules produced and the between-host transmission rate. We introduce a four-population partial differential equations (PDE) model to investigate the invasibility and prevalence of an obligately killing fungal parasite in a zooplankton host as they are embedded in an ecological network of predators and resources. Our results provide key insights into the role of ecological interactions that vary with the age of infection. First, selective predation, which is known both theoretically and empirically to reduce disease prevalence, does not always limit disease spread. This condition dependency relies on the timing and intensity of selective predation and how that interacts with the direct effects of the parasite on host mortality. Second, low host resources and intense predation can prevent disease spread, but once conditions allow the invasion of the parasite, the qualitative dynamics of the system do not depend on the intensity of the selective predation. Third, a comparison of the PDE model with a model based on ordinary differential equations (ODE model) reveals a parametrization for the ODE version that yields an endemic steady state and basic reproductive ratio that are identical to those in the PDE model. Our results highlight the complexity of resource-host-parasite-predator interactions and suggest the need for additional data-theory coupling exploring how community ecology influences the spread of infectious diseases.


Subject(s)
Host-Pathogen Interactions , Models, Biological , Animals , Daphnia/microbiology , Disease Transmission, Infectious , Ecosystem , Food Chain , Host-Parasite Interactions , Mathematical Concepts , Metschnikowia/pathogenicity , Predatory Behavior , Virulence , Zooplankton/microbiology
7.
Ecol Lett ; 18(9): 916-26, 2015 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26119173

ABSTRACT

It remains challenging to predict variation in the magnitude of disease outbreaks. The dilution effect seeks to explain this variation by linking multiple host species to disease transmission. It predicts that disease risk increases for a focal host when host species diversity declines. However, when an increase in species diversity does not reduce disease, we are often unable to diagnose why. Here, we increase mechanistic and predictive clarity of the dilution effect with a general trait-based model of disease transmission in multi-host communities. Then, we parameterise and empirically test our model with a multi-generational case study of planktonic disease. The model-experiment combination shows that hosts that vary in competitive ability (R*) and potential to spread disease (R0 ) can produce three qualitatively disparate outcomes of dilution on disease: the dilution effect can succeed, fail, or be ambiguous/irrelevant.


Subject(s)
Daphnia/microbiology , Host-Pathogen Interactions/genetics , Metschnikowia/pathogenicity , Models, Biological , Animals , Daphnia/genetics , Disease Susceptibility , Genetic Variation , Genotype
8.
Ecol Lett ; 16(5): 626-34, 2013 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23452184

ABSTRACT

Disease dynamics hinge on parasite transmission among hosts. However, canonical models for transmission often fit data poorly, limiting predictive ability. One solution involves building mechanistic yet general links between host behaviour and disease spread. To illustrate, we focus on the exposure component of transmission for hosts that consume their parasites, combining experiments, models and field data. Models of transmission that incorporate parasite consumption and foraging interference among hosts vastly outperformed alternatives when fit to experimental data using a zooplankton host (Daphnia dentifera) that consumes spores of a fungus (Metschnikowia bicuspidata). Once plugged into a fully dynamic model, both mechanisms inhibited epidemics overall. Foraging interference further depressed parasite invasion and prevalence at high host density, creating unimodal (hump-shaped) relationships between host density and these indices. These novel results qualitatively matched a unimodal density-prevalence relationship in natural epidemics. Ultimately, a mechanistic approach to transmission can reveal new insights into disease outbreaks.


Subject(s)
Daphnia/microbiology , Host-Pathogen Interactions , Metschnikowia/pathogenicity , Animals , Disease Outbreaks , Feeding Behavior , Indiana , Metschnikowia/physiology , Models, Biological , Population Density , Spores, Fungal , Zooplankton
9.
Science ; 335(6076): 1636-8, 2012 Mar 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22461614

ABSTRACT

The occurrence and magnitude of disease outbreaks can strongly influence host evolution. In particular, when hosts face a resistance-fecundity trade-off, they might evolve increased resistance to infection during larger epidemics but increased susceptibility during smaller ones. We tested this theoretical prediction by using a zooplankton-yeast host-parasite system in which ecological factors determine epidemic size. Lakes with high productivity and low predation pressure had large yeast epidemics; during these outbreaks, hosts became more resistant to infection. However, with low productivity and high predation, epidemics remained small and hosts evolved increased susceptibility. Thus, by modulating disease outbreaks, ecological context (productivity and predation) shaped host evolution during epidemics. Consequently, anthropogenic alteration of productivity and predation might strongly influence both ecological and evolutionary outcomes of disease.


Subject(s)
Biological Evolution , Daphnia/microbiology , Daphnia/physiology , Ecosystem , Host-Pathogen Interactions , Lakes , Metschnikowia/pathogenicity , Animals , Female , Fishes , Indiana , Male , Models, Biological , Population Dynamics , Predatory Behavior , Reproduction , Zooplankton/microbiology , Zooplankton/physiology
10.
Int J Parasitol ; 42(1): 115-21, 2012 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22154851

ABSTRACT

Numerous theoretical studies suggest that parasites impose a strong selection pressure on their host, driving genetic changes within host populations. Yet evidence of this process in the wild is scarce. In the present study we surveyed, using high resolution microsatellite markers, the genetic structure of cyclically parthenogenetic Daphnia hosts within two different Daphnia communities belonging to the Daphnia longispina hybrid complex. One community, consisting of a single host species, was infected with the protozoan parasite Caullerya mesnili. The second community consisted of two parental Daphnia spp. and their hybrids, and was infected with the yeast parasite Metschnikowia. Significant differences in the clonal composition between random and infected sub-samples of Daphnia were detected on several occasions within both communities, indicating that host genotypes differ in resistance to both parasites. In addition, one parental species in the multi-taxon community was consistently under-infected, compared with the other taxa. Overall, our field data confirm that infection patterns are strongly affected by host genetic composition in various Daphnia-microparasite systems. Thus, parasite-driven selection operates in natural Daphnia populations and microparasites influence the clonal structure of host populations.


Subject(s)
Daphnia/classification , Daphnia/genetics , Mesomycetozoea/pathogenicity , Metschnikowia/pathogenicity , Animals , Biota , Daphnia/microbiology , Daphnia/parasitology , Host-Parasite Interactions , Microsatellite Repeats , Molecular Typing
11.
Extremophiles ; 14(6): 515-21, 2010 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20972898

ABSTRACT

The psychrotolerant yeast Mrakia frigida 2E00797 isolated from sea sediment in Antarctica was found to be able to produce killer toxin against the pathogenic yeast (Metschnikowia bicuspidata WCY) in crab. When the psychrotolerant yeast was grown in the medium with pH 4.5 and 3.0% (wt/vol) NaCl and at 15°C, it could produce the highest amount of killer toxin against the pathogenic yeast M. bicuspidata WCY. The crude killer toxin activity against the pathogenic yeast M. bicuspidata WCY was the highest when it grew at 15°C in the assay medium with 3.0% (wt/vol) NaCl and pH 4.5. At temperatures higher than 25°C, the killing activity produced by M. frigida 2E00797 was completely lost and after the crude killer toxin was pre-incubated at temperatures higher than 40°C for 4 h, the killing activity was also completely lost. The killer toxin produced by M. frigida 2E00797 could kill only M. bicuspidata WCY, Candida tropicalis and Candida albicans among all the fungal species and bacterial species tested in this study.


Subject(s)
Killer Factors, Yeast/physiology , Metschnikowia , Animals , Antarctic Regions , Bacteriological Techniques/methods , Biota , Brachyura/microbiology , Cold Temperature , Culture Media , DNA, Fungal/genetics , Metschnikowia/isolation & purification , Metschnikowia/pathogenicity , Metschnikowia/physiology , Microbial Interactions/physiology , Phylogeny
12.
Parasitology ; 137(10): 1493-500, 2010 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20444300

ABSTRACT

The epidemiological and ecological processes which govern the success of multiple-species co-infections are as yet unresolved. Here we investigated prior versus late residency within hosts, meaning which parasite contacts the host first, to determine if the outcomes of intra-host competition are altered. We infected a single genotype of the waterflea Daphnia galeata with both the intestinal protozoan Caullerya mesnili and the haemolymph fungus Metschnikowia sp. (single genotype of each parasite species), as single infections, simultaneous co-infections and as sequential co-infections, with each parasite given 4 days prior residency. Simultaneous co-infections were significantly more virulent than both single infections and sequential co-infections, as measured by a decreased host life span and fecundity. Further, in addition to the Daphnia host, the parasites also suffered fitness decreases in simultaneous co-infections, as measured by spore production. The sequential co-infections, however, had mixed effects: C. mesnili benefited from prior residency, whereas Metschnikowia sp. experienced a decline in fitness. Our results show that multiple-species co-infections of Daphnia may be more virulent than single infections, and that prior residency does not always provide a competitive advantage.


Subject(s)
Daphnia/microbiology , Daphnia/parasitology , Host-Parasite Interactions , Mesomycetozoea/physiology , Metschnikowia/physiology , Animals , Competitive Behavior , Mesomycetozoea/pathogenicity , Metschnikowia/pathogenicity , Population Dynamics , Time Factors , Virulence
13.
Am Nat ; 174(2): 149-62, 2009 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19527119

ABSTRACT

Parasites steal resources that a host would otherwise direct toward its own growth and reproduction. We use this fundamental notion to explain resource-dependent virulence in a fungal parasite (Metschnikowia)-zooplankton host (Daphnia) system and in a variety of other disease systems with invertebrate hosts. In an experiment, well-fed hosts died faster and produced more parasites than did austerely fed ones. This resource-dependent variation in virulence and other experimental results (involving growth and reproduction rate/timing of hosts) readily emerged from a model based on dynamic energy budgets. This model follows energy flow through the host, from ingestion of food, to internal energy storage, to allocation toward growth and reproduction or to a parasite that consumes these reserves. Acting as a consumer, the parasite catalyzes its own extinction, persistence with an energetically compromised host, or death of the host. In this last case, more resources for the host inadvertently fuels faster parasite growth, thereby accelerating the demise of the host (although the opposite result arises with different resource kinetics of the parasite). Thus, this model can explain how resource supply drives variation in virulence. This ecological dependence of virulence likely rivals and/or interacts with genetic mechanisms that often garner more attention in the literature on disease.


Subject(s)
Daphnia/microbiology , Energy Metabolism , Host-Parasite Interactions , Metschnikowia/pathogenicity , Animals , Metschnikowia/growth & development , Metschnikowia/metabolism , Models, Biological , Population Dynamics , Reproduction , Virulence
14.
Am Nat ; 171(4): 499-510, 2008 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18260781

ABSTRACT

Parasites are ubiquitous and often highly virulent, yet clear examples of parasite-driven changes in host density in natural populations are surprisingly scarce. Here, we illustrate an example of this phenomenon and offer a theoretically reasonable resolution. We document the effects of two parasites, the bacterium Spirobacillus cienkowskii and the yeast Metschnikowia bicuspidata, on a common freshwater invertebrate, Daphnia dentifera. We show that while both parasites were quite virulent to individual hosts, only bacterial epidemics were associated with significant changes in host population dynamics and density. Our theoretical results may help explain why yeast epidemics did not significantly affect population dynamics. Using a model parameterized with data we collected, we argue that two prominent features of this system, rapid evolution of host resistance to the parasite and selective predation on infected hosts, both decrease peak infection prevalence and can minimize decline in host density during epidemics. Taken together, our results show that understanding the outcomes of host-parasite interactions in this Daphnia-microparasite system may require consideration of ecological context and evolutionary processes and their interaction.


Subject(s)
Biological Evolution , Daphnia/microbiology , Deltaproteobacteria/physiology , Host-Pathogen Interactions , Metschnikowia/physiology , Predatory Behavior , Animals , Deltaproteobacteria/pathogenicity , Metschnikowia/pathogenicity , Models, Genetic , Perciformes , Population Density , Population Dynamics , Selection, Genetic
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