Parasite-gut microbiota associations in wild wood mice ().

Front Microbiol

Department of Pathobiology and Population Sciences, The Royal Veterinary College, Hatfield, Hertfordshire, United Kingdom.

Published: November 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • The mammalian gut hosts a variety of microorganisms, including beneficial ones (commensals) and harmful ones (pathogens), which can positively or negatively affect the host's health.
  • This study focuses on the relationship between specific parasites (helminths and coccidia) and the gut microbiota in wild wood mice over three years, using both invasive and non-invasive methods to gather data.
  • Findings indicate that while the overall composition of gut microbiota isn't directly influenced by common parasites, microbiota diversity is affected in specific ways, suggesting a complex relationship that warrants further research to understand how these interactions work.

Article Abstract

The mammalian gastrointestinal tract provides a habitat for multiple commensal and pathogenic organisms spanning all three domains of life. Both positive and negative interactions occur between gut inhabitants, with potential consequences for host health. Studies of parasite-microbiota associations in natural systems remain scarce, yet are important for understanding how parasite communities and commensal microbiota shape each other, and how these interactions influence host health. Here, we characterize associations between helminth and coccidial infections and gut microbiota profiles in a wild population of wood mice () over 3 years, using two complementary approaches. We first examined parasite-microbiota associations along the length of the gastrointestinal tract through destructive sampling. Then, in a larger non-invasive capture mark-recapture study, we assessed whether gut parasitic infections detected in feces predicted fecal microbiota diversity and composition. We found that while overall microbiota composition was not associated with infection by any common gut parasite species, microbiota richness was associated with gut parasitism in two ways: (i) infection by the trematode in the small intestine predicted higher microbiota diversity in the caecum; (ii) there was a negative relationship between gut parasite richness and fecal microbiota richness in the non-invasive study. As our results identified associations between gastrointestinal parasites and microbiota alpha diversity, a future experimental study in this tractable wild mammalian system would be valuable to definitively test the directionality of these interactions.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11608965PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2024.1440427DOI Listing

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