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1.
Proc Biol Sci ; 290(2003): 20231119, 2023 07 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37491967

RESUMO

Bacterial infections are often polymicrobial, leading to intricate pathogen-pathogen and pathogen-host interactions. There is increasing interest in studying the molecular basis of pathogen interactions and how such mechanisms impact host morbidity. However, much less is known about the ecological dynamics between pathogens and how they affect virulence and host survival. Here we address these open issues by co-infecting larvae of the insect model host Galleria mellonella with one, two, three or four bacterial species, all of which are opportunistic human pathogens. We found that host mortality was always determined by the most virulent species regardless of the number of species and pathogen combinations injected. In certain combinations, the more virulent pathogen simply outgrew the less virulent pathogen. In other combinations, we found evidence for negative interactions between pathogens inside the host, whereby the more virulent pathogen typically won a competition. Taken together, our findings reveal positive associations between a pathogen's growth inside the host, its competitiveness towards other pathogens and its virulence. Beyond being generalizable across species combinations, our findings predict that treatments against polymicrobial infections should first target the most virulent species to reduce host morbidity, a prediction we validated experimentally.


Assuntos
Infecções Bacterianas , Mariposas , Animais , Humanos , Virulência , Mariposas/microbiologia , Larva/microbiologia , Interações Hospedeiro-Patógeno
2.
Curr Biol ; 29(9): 1528-1535.e6, 2019 05 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31031118

RESUMO

Understanding the principles that govern the assembly of microbial communities across earth's biomes is a major challenge in modern microbial ecology. This pursuit is complicated by the difficulties of mapping functional roles and interactions onto communities with immense taxonomic diversity and of identifying the scale at which microbes interact [1]. To address this challenge, here, we focused on the bacterial communities that colonize and degrade particulate organic matter in the ocean [2-4]. We show that the assembly of these communities can be simplified as a linear combination of functional modules. Using synthetic polysaccharide particles immersed in natural bacterioplankton assemblages [1, 5], we showed that successional particle colonization dynamics are driven by the interaction of two types of modules: a first type made of narrowly specialized primary degraders, whose dynamics are controlled by particle polysaccharide composition, and a second type containing substrate-independent taxa whose dynamics are controlled by interspecific interactions-in particular, cross-feeding via organic acids, amino acids, and other metabolic byproducts. We show that, as a consequence of this trophic structure, communities can assemble modularly-i.e., by a simple sum of substrate-specific primary degrader modules, one for each complex polysaccharide in the particle, connected to a single broad-niche range consumer module. Consistent with this model, a linear combination of the communities on single-polysaccharide particles accurately predicts community composition on mixed-polysaccharide particles. Our results suggest that the assembly of heterotrophic communities that degrade complex organic materials follows simple design principles that could be exploited to engineer heterotrophic microbiomes.


Assuntos
Fenômenos Fisiológicos Bacterianos , Microbiota/fisiologia , Água do Mar/microbiologia , Bactérias/classificação , Massachusetts
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