Microbiome "Inception": an Intestinal Cestode Shapes a Hierarchy of Microbial Communities Nested within the Host

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Microbiome "Inception" : an Intestinal Cestode Shapes a Hierarchy of Microbial Communities Nested within the Host. / Brealey, Jaelle C.; Lecaudey, Laurène A.; Kodama, Miyako; Rasmussen, Jacob A.; Sveier, Harald; Dheilly, Nolwenn M.; Martin, Michael D.; Limborg, Morten T.

In: mBio, Vol. 13, No. 3, e00679-22, 2022.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Brealey, JC, Lecaudey, LA, Kodama, M, Rasmussen, JA, Sveier, H, Dheilly, NM, Martin, MD & Limborg, MT 2022, 'Microbiome "Inception": an Intestinal Cestode Shapes a Hierarchy of Microbial Communities Nested within the Host', mBio, vol. 13, no. 3, e00679-22. https://doi.org/10.1128/mbio.00679-22

APA

Brealey, J. C., Lecaudey, L. A., Kodama, M., Rasmussen, J. A., Sveier, H., Dheilly, N. M., Martin, M. D., & Limborg, M. T. (2022). Microbiome "Inception": an Intestinal Cestode Shapes a Hierarchy of Microbial Communities Nested within the Host. mBio, 13(3), [e00679-22]. https://doi.org/10.1128/mbio.00679-22

Vancouver

Brealey JC, Lecaudey LA, Kodama M, Rasmussen JA, Sveier H, Dheilly NM et al. Microbiome "Inception": an Intestinal Cestode Shapes a Hierarchy of Microbial Communities Nested within the Host. mBio. 2022;13(3). e00679-22. https://doi.org/10.1128/mbio.00679-22

Author

Brealey, Jaelle C. ; Lecaudey, Laurène A. ; Kodama, Miyako ; Rasmussen, Jacob A. ; Sveier, Harald ; Dheilly, Nolwenn M. ; Martin, Michael D. ; Limborg, Morten T. / Microbiome "Inception" : an Intestinal Cestode Shapes a Hierarchy of Microbial Communities Nested within the Host. In: mBio. 2022 ; Vol. 13, No. 3.

Bibtex

@article{fced4cd60cf64873b219c8ed7b7723d2,
title = "Microbiome {"}Inception{"}: an Intestinal Cestode Shapes a Hierarchy of Microbial Communities Nested within the Host",
abstract = "The concept of a holobiont, a host organism and its associated microbial communities, encapsulates the vital role the microbiome plays in the normal functioning of its host. Parasitic infections can disrupt this relationship, leading to dysbiosis. However, it is increasingly recognized that multicellular parasites are themselves holobionts. Intestinal parasites share space with the host gut microbiome, creating a system of nested microbiomes within the primary host. However, how the parasite, as a holobiont, interacts with the host holobiont remains unclear, as do the consequences of these interactions for host health. Here, we used 16S amplicon and shotgun metagenomics sequencing to characterize the microbiome of the intestinal cestode Eubothrium and its effect on the gut microbiome of its primary host, Atlantic salmon. Our results indicate that cestode infection is associated with salmon gut dysbiosis by acting as a selective force benefiting putative pathogens and potentially introducing novel bacterial species to the host. Our results suggest that parasitic cestodes may themselves be holobionts nested within the microbial community of their holobiont host, emphasizing the importance of also considering microbes associated with parasites when studying intestinal parasitic infections. IMPORTANCE The importance of the parasite microbiome is gaining recognition. Of particular concern is understanding how these parasite microbiomes influence host-parasite interactions and parasite interactions with the vertebrate host microbiome as part of a system of nested holobionts. However, there are still relatively few studies focusing on the microbiome of parasitic helminths in general and almost none on cestodes in particular, despite the significant burden of disease caused by these parasites globally. Our study provides insights into a system of significance to the aquaculture industry, cestode infections of Atlantic salmon and, more broadly, expands our general understanding of parasite-microbiome-host interactions and introduces a new element, the microbiome of the parasite itself, which may play a critical role in modulating the host microbiome, and, therefore, the host response, to parasite infection.",
author = "Brealey, {Jaelle C.} and Lecaudey, {Laur{\`e}ne A.} and Miyako Kodama and Rasmussen, {Jacob A.} and Harald Sveier and Dheilly, {Nolwenn M.} and Martin, {Michael D.} and Limborg, {Morten T}",
year = "2022",
doi = "10.1128/mbio.00679-22",
language = "English",
volume = "13",
journal = "mBio",
issn = "2161-2129",
publisher = "American Society for Microbiology",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Microbiome "Inception"

T2 - an Intestinal Cestode Shapes a Hierarchy of Microbial Communities Nested within the Host

AU - Brealey, Jaelle C.

AU - Lecaudey, Laurène A.

AU - Kodama, Miyako

AU - Rasmussen, Jacob A.

AU - Sveier, Harald

AU - Dheilly, Nolwenn M.

AU - Martin, Michael D.

AU - Limborg, Morten T

PY - 2022

Y1 - 2022

N2 - The concept of a holobiont, a host organism and its associated microbial communities, encapsulates the vital role the microbiome plays in the normal functioning of its host. Parasitic infections can disrupt this relationship, leading to dysbiosis. However, it is increasingly recognized that multicellular parasites are themselves holobionts. Intestinal parasites share space with the host gut microbiome, creating a system of nested microbiomes within the primary host. However, how the parasite, as a holobiont, interacts with the host holobiont remains unclear, as do the consequences of these interactions for host health. Here, we used 16S amplicon and shotgun metagenomics sequencing to characterize the microbiome of the intestinal cestode Eubothrium and its effect on the gut microbiome of its primary host, Atlantic salmon. Our results indicate that cestode infection is associated with salmon gut dysbiosis by acting as a selective force benefiting putative pathogens and potentially introducing novel bacterial species to the host. Our results suggest that parasitic cestodes may themselves be holobionts nested within the microbial community of their holobiont host, emphasizing the importance of also considering microbes associated with parasites when studying intestinal parasitic infections. IMPORTANCE The importance of the parasite microbiome is gaining recognition. Of particular concern is understanding how these parasite microbiomes influence host-parasite interactions and parasite interactions with the vertebrate host microbiome as part of a system of nested holobionts. However, there are still relatively few studies focusing on the microbiome of parasitic helminths in general and almost none on cestodes in particular, despite the significant burden of disease caused by these parasites globally. Our study provides insights into a system of significance to the aquaculture industry, cestode infections of Atlantic salmon and, more broadly, expands our general understanding of parasite-microbiome-host interactions and introduces a new element, the microbiome of the parasite itself, which may play a critical role in modulating the host microbiome, and, therefore, the host response, to parasite infection.

AB - The concept of a holobiont, a host organism and its associated microbial communities, encapsulates the vital role the microbiome plays in the normal functioning of its host. Parasitic infections can disrupt this relationship, leading to dysbiosis. However, it is increasingly recognized that multicellular parasites are themselves holobionts. Intestinal parasites share space with the host gut microbiome, creating a system of nested microbiomes within the primary host. However, how the parasite, as a holobiont, interacts with the host holobiont remains unclear, as do the consequences of these interactions for host health. Here, we used 16S amplicon and shotgun metagenomics sequencing to characterize the microbiome of the intestinal cestode Eubothrium and its effect on the gut microbiome of its primary host, Atlantic salmon. Our results indicate that cestode infection is associated with salmon gut dysbiosis by acting as a selective force benefiting putative pathogens and potentially introducing novel bacterial species to the host. Our results suggest that parasitic cestodes may themselves be holobionts nested within the microbial community of their holobiont host, emphasizing the importance of also considering microbes associated with parasites when studying intestinal parasitic infections. IMPORTANCE The importance of the parasite microbiome is gaining recognition. Of particular concern is understanding how these parasite microbiomes influence host-parasite interactions and parasite interactions with the vertebrate host microbiome as part of a system of nested holobionts. However, there are still relatively few studies focusing on the microbiome of parasitic helminths in general and almost none on cestodes in particular, despite the significant burden of disease caused by these parasites globally. Our study provides insights into a system of significance to the aquaculture industry, cestode infections of Atlantic salmon and, more broadly, expands our general understanding of parasite-microbiome-host interactions and introduces a new element, the microbiome of the parasite itself, which may play a critical role in modulating the host microbiome, and, therefore, the host response, to parasite infection.

U2 - 10.1128/mbio.00679-22

DO - 10.1128/mbio.00679-22

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 35502903

VL - 13

JO - mBio

JF - mBio

SN - 2161-2129

IS - 3

M1 - e00679-22

ER -

ID: 308492902