Publications by authors named "Destoumieux-Garzon D"

The Pacific oyster lives in microbe-rich marine coastal systems subjected to rapid environmental changes. It harbours a diversified and fluctuating microbiota that cohabits with immune cells expressing a diversified immune gene repertoire. In the early stages of oyster development, just after fertilization, the microbiota plays a key role in educating the immune system.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Inter-individual transmission of cancer cells represents a unique form of microparasites increasingly reported in marine bivalves. In this study, we sought to understand the ecology of the propagation of Bivalve Transmissible Neoplasia 2 (MtrBTN2), a transmissible cancer affecting four mussel species worldwide. We investigated the prevalence of MtrBTN2 in the mosaic hybrid zone of and along the French Atlantic coast, sampling contrasting natural and anthropogenic habitats.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Transmissible cancer cell lines are rare biological entities giving rise to diseases at the crossroads of cancer and parasitic diseases. These malignant cells have acquired the amazing capacity to spread from host to host. They have been described only in dogs, Tasmanian devils and marine bivalves.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • - Polymicrobial infections, like Pacific Oyster Mortality Syndrome (POMS), are complex and under-researched, involving interactions between the ostreid herpesvirus 1 (OsHV-1) and harmful bacteria impacting oyster populations on the French Atlantic coast.
  • - Field studies and laboratory experiments revealed that certain bacterial communities flourish in oysters infected with OsHV-1 and that these bacteria can enhance the virus's effects, leading to accelerated oyster mortality.
  • - Cooperative behaviors among bacteria, including promoting one another’s growth and sharing resources, play a significant role in the severity of POMS, suggesting that targeting these interactions may help manage the disease and protect oyster health.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Mass mortality events caused by vibriosis have emerged in hatchery-reared scallop larvae from Chile, threatening scallop aquaculture. In an attempt to mitigate this emerging infectious disease and provide candidates for marker-assisted selective breeding, we tested here the existence of a genetic component of scallop resistance to the pathogen Through a dual RNA-seq approach we analyzed the basal transcriptome and the transcriptional response to infection in two resistant and two susceptible families as well as the pathogen transcriptomic response to host colonization. The results highlighted a genetic basis in the resistance of scallop larvae to the pathogen.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • * The pathogen's impact on oyster aquaculture in Europe worsened after its re-emergence in 2012, prompting a study on mollusc diseases across European national labs.
  • * Through genomic analysis of 54 Vibrio aestuarianus strains, researchers discovered that the pathogenic subspecies has a distinct epidemic structure and identified a genetic island that provides copper resistance, aiding its adaptation and persistence in oyster populations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Big defensins are two-domain antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) that have highly diversified in mollusks. -BigDefs are expressed by immune cells in the oyster , and their expression is dampened during the Pacific Oyster Mortality Syndrome (POMS), which evolves toward fatal bacteremia. We evaluated whether -BigDefs contribute to the control of oyster-associated microbial communities.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Some cancers have evolved the ability to spread from host to host by transmission of cancerous cells. These rare biological entities can be considered parasites with a host-related genome. Still, we know little about their specific adaptation to a parasitic lifestyle.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Recent pandemics have highlighted the urgency to connect disciplines studying animal, human, and environment health, that is, the "One Health" concept. The One Health approach takes a holistic view of health, but it has largely focused on zoonotic diseases while not addressing oncogenic processes. We argue that cancers should be an additional key focus in the One Health approach based on three factors that add to the well-documented impact of humans on the natural environment and its implications on cancer emergence.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The implementation of One Health/EcoHealth/Planetary Health approaches has been identified as key (i) to address the strong interconnections between risk for pandemics, climate change and biodiversity loss and (ii) to develop and implement solutions to these interlinked crises. As a response to the multiple calls from scientists on that subject, we have here proposed seven long-term research questions regarding COVID-19 and emerging infectious diseases (EIDs) that are based on effective integration of environmental, ecological, evolutionary, and social sciences to better anticipate and mitigate EIDs. Research needs cover the social ecology of infectious disease agents, their evolution, the determinants of susceptibility of humans and animals to infections, and the human and ecological factors accelerating infectious disease emergence.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Transmissible cancers are unique malignant cell lines that can infect other individuals of the same or closely-related species, with previous cases identified in dogs, Tasmanian devils, and marine bivalves.
  • In this study, researchers examined 5,907 European Mytilus mussels to investigate the presence of bivalve transmissible neoplasia (BTN), particularly focusing on two lineages (MtrBTN1 and MtrBTN2) and their genetic variations.
  • The analysis revealed low prevalence of MtrBTN2 in Mytilus edulis and M. galloprovincialis, with some observed genetic diversity in MtrBTN2, suggesting a complex history of evolution and host adaptation despite the absence
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The Pacific oyster () has been introduced from Asia to numerous countries around the world during the 20th century. is the main oyster species farmed worldwide and represents more than 98% of oyster production. The severity of disease outbreaks that affect , which primarily impact juvenile oysters, has increased dramatically since 2008.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Wild and farmed animals are key elements of natural and managed ecosystems that deliver functions such as pollination, pest control and nutrient cycling within the broader roles they play in contributing to biodiversity and to every category of ecosystem services. They are subjected to global changes with a profound impact on the natural range and viability of animal species, the emergence and spatial distribution of pathogens, land use, ecosystem services and farming sustainability. We urgently need to improve our understanding of how animal populations can respond adaptively and therefore sustainably to these new selective pressures.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Discovery after discovery, host-associated microbiota reveal a growing list of positive effects on host homeostasis by contributing to host nutrition, improving hosts' immune systems and protecting hosts against pathogens. In that context, a collection of oyster associated bacteria producing antibacterial compounds have been established to evaluate their role in non-host-derived immunity. Here, we described alterins; potent anti-Gram negative compounds produced by h-6 and h-42 isolated from different healthy oyster hemolymph.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • COVID-19 has raised questions about how new infections are connected to the environment, climate, and health, leading to a research project by the European Union called H2020 HERA.
  • The spread of the virus is linked to things like city development, habitat destruction, animal trade, and global travel, and more research is needed on the role of climate and pollution.
  • The pandemic has caused changes in society and behavior that could affect health for a long time, and future recovery plans need to consider their environmental and health impacts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Juvenile Pacific oysters face serious threats from mass mortality events known as Pacific Oyster Mortality Syndrome (POMS), primarily caused by a variant of the Ostreid herpes virus (OsHV-1 μVar).
  • Research shows that there's genetic diversity in the OsHV-1 μVar virus during different outbreaks, and this diversity affects how different oyster families respond to POMS in varying coastal environments (Atlantic vs. Mediterranean).
  • The findings highlight the need for selective breeding programs that consider this viral diversity and its impact on oyster survival, which is crucial for the sustainability of the oyster industry.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Big defensins are antimicrobial polypeptides believed to be the ancestors of β-defensins, the most evolutionary conserved family of host defense peptides (HDPs) in vertebrates. Nevertheless, big defensins underwent several independent gene loss events during animal evolution, being only retained in a limited number of phylogenetically distant invertebrates. Here, we explore the evolutionary history of this fascinating HDP family and investigate its patchy distribution in extant metazoans.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In the marine environment, bivalve mollusks constitute habitats for bacteria of the Vibrionaceae family. Vibrios belong to the microbiota of healthy oysters and mussels, which have the ability to concentrate bacteria in their tissues and body fluids, including the hemolymph. Remarkably, these important aquaculture species respond differently to infectious diseases.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A major debate in evolutionary biology is whether virulence is maintained as an adaptive trait and/or evolves to non-virulence. In the environment, virulence traits of non-obligatory parasites are subjected to diverse selective pressures and trade-offs. Here, we focus on a population of Vibrio splendidus that displays moderate virulence for oysters.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Over the last decade, innate immune priming has been evidenced in many invertebrate phyla. If mechanistic models have been proposed, molecular studies aiming to substantiate these models have remained scarce. We reveal here the transcriptional signature associated with immune priming in the oyster Oysters were fully protected against Ostreid herpesvirus 1 (OsHV-1), a major oyster pathogen, after priming with poly(I·C), which mimics viral double-stranded RNA.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Big defensins, ancestors of β-defensins, are composed of a β-defensin-like C-terminal domain and a globular hydrophobic ancestral N-terminal domain. This unique structure is found in a limited number of phylogenetically distant species, including mollusks, ancestral chelicerates, and early-branching cephalochordates, mostly living in marine environments. One puzzling evolutionary issue concerns the advantage for these species of having maintained a hydrophobic domain lost during evolution toward β-defensins.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Vibrios are ubiquitous in marine environments and opportunistically colonize a broad range of hosts. Strains of Vibrio tasmaniensis present in oyster farms can thrive in oysters during juvenile mortality events and behave as facultative intracellular pathogen of oyster haemocytes. Herein, we wondered whether V.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

species cause infectious diseases in humans and animals, but they can also live as commensals within their host tissues. How subverts the host defenses to mount a successful infection remains poorly understood, and this knowledge is critical for predicting and managing disease. Here, we have investigated the cellular and molecular mechanisms underpinning infection and colonization of 2 virulent species in an ecologically relevant host model, oyster, to study interactions with marine species.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

CsrBs are bacterial highly conserved and multiple-copy noncoding small RNAs (sRNAs) that play major roles in cell physiology and virulence. In the genus, they are known to be regulated by the two-component system VarS/VarA. They modulate the well-characterized quorum sensing pathway controlling virulence and luminescence in and , respectively.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF