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Ecological and evolutionary drivers of haemoplasma infection and bacterial genotype sharing in a Neotropical bat community

Most emerging pathogens can infect multiple species, underlining the importance of understanding the ecological and evolutionary factors that allow some hosts to harbour greater infection prevalence and share pathogens with other species. However, our understanding of pathogen jumps is based primari...

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Autores principales: Becker, Daniel J., Speer, Kelly A., Brown, Alexis M., Fenton, M. Brock, Washburne, Alex D., Altizer, Sonia, Streicker, Daniel G., Plowright, Raina K., Chizhikov, Vladimir E., Simmons, Nancy B., Volokhov, Dmitriy V.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8299350/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32243630
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/mec.15422
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author Becker, Daniel J.
Speer, Kelly A.
Brown, Alexis M.
Fenton, M. Brock
Washburne, Alex D.
Altizer, Sonia
Streicker, Daniel G.
Plowright, Raina K.
Chizhikov, Vladimir E.
Simmons, Nancy B.
Volokhov, Dmitriy V.
author_facet Becker, Daniel J.
Speer, Kelly A.
Brown, Alexis M.
Fenton, M. Brock
Washburne, Alex D.
Altizer, Sonia
Streicker, Daniel G.
Plowright, Raina K.
Chizhikov, Vladimir E.
Simmons, Nancy B.
Volokhov, Dmitriy V.
author_sort Becker, Daniel J.
collection PubMed
description Most emerging pathogens can infect multiple species, underlining the importance of understanding the ecological and evolutionary factors that allow some hosts to harbour greater infection prevalence and share pathogens with other species. However, our understanding of pathogen jumps is based primarily around viruses, despite bacteria accounting for the greatest proportion of zoonoses. Because bacterial pathogens in bats (order Chiroptera) can have conservation and human health consequences, studies that examine the ecological and evolutionary drivers of bacterial prevalence and barriers to pathogen sharing are crucially needed. Here were studied haemotropic Mycoplasma spp. (i.e., haemoplasmas) across a species‐rich bat community in Belize over two years. Across 469 bats spanning 33 species, half of individuals and two‐thirds of species were haemoplasma positive. Infection prevalence was higher for males and for species with larger body mass and colony sizes. Haemoplasmas displayed high genetic diversity (21 novel genotypes) and strong host specificity. Evolutionary patterns supported codivergence of bats and bacterial genotypes alongside phylogenetically constrained host shifts. Bat species centrality to the network of shared haemoplasma genotypes was phylogenetically clustered and unrelated to prevalence, further suggesting rare—but detectable—bacterial sharing between species. Our study highlights the importance of using fine phylogenetic scales when assessing host specificity and suggests phylogenetic similarity may play a key role in host shifts not only for viruses but also for bacteria. Such work more broadly contributes to increasing efforts to understand cross‐species transmission and the epidemiological consequences of bacterial pathogens.
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spelling pubmed-82993502021-07-27 Ecological and evolutionary drivers of haemoplasma infection and bacterial genotype sharing in a Neotropical bat community Becker, Daniel J. Speer, Kelly A. Brown, Alexis M. Fenton, M. Brock Washburne, Alex D. Altizer, Sonia Streicker, Daniel G. Plowright, Raina K. Chizhikov, Vladimir E. Simmons, Nancy B. Volokhov, Dmitriy V. Mol Ecol ORIGINAL ARTICLES Most emerging pathogens can infect multiple species, underlining the importance of understanding the ecological and evolutionary factors that allow some hosts to harbour greater infection prevalence and share pathogens with other species. However, our understanding of pathogen jumps is based primarily around viruses, despite bacteria accounting for the greatest proportion of zoonoses. Because bacterial pathogens in bats (order Chiroptera) can have conservation and human health consequences, studies that examine the ecological and evolutionary drivers of bacterial prevalence and barriers to pathogen sharing are crucially needed. Here were studied haemotropic Mycoplasma spp. (i.e., haemoplasmas) across a species‐rich bat community in Belize over two years. Across 469 bats spanning 33 species, half of individuals and two‐thirds of species were haemoplasma positive. Infection prevalence was higher for males and for species with larger body mass and colony sizes. Haemoplasmas displayed high genetic diversity (21 novel genotypes) and strong host specificity. Evolutionary patterns supported codivergence of bats and bacterial genotypes alongside phylogenetically constrained host shifts. Bat species centrality to the network of shared haemoplasma genotypes was phylogenetically clustered and unrelated to prevalence, further suggesting rare—but detectable—bacterial sharing between species. Our study highlights the importance of using fine phylogenetic scales when assessing host specificity and suggests phylogenetic similarity may play a key role in host shifts not only for viruses but also for bacteria. Such work more broadly contributes to increasing efforts to understand cross‐species transmission and the epidemiological consequences of bacterial pathogens. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2020-04-21 2020-04 /pmc/articles/PMC8299350/ /pubmed/32243630 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/mec.15422 Text en © 2020 The Authors. Molecular Ecology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle ORIGINAL ARTICLES
Becker, Daniel J.
Speer, Kelly A.
Brown, Alexis M.
Fenton, M. Brock
Washburne, Alex D.
Altizer, Sonia
Streicker, Daniel G.
Plowright, Raina K.
Chizhikov, Vladimir E.
Simmons, Nancy B.
Volokhov, Dmitriy V.
Ecological and evolutionary drivers of haemoplasma infection and bacterial genotype sharing in a Neotropical bat community
title Ecological and evolutionary drivers of haemoplasma infection and bacterial genotype sharing in a Neotropical bat community
title_full Ecological and evolutionary drivers of haemoplasma infection and bacterial genotype sharing in a Neotropical bat community
title_fullStr Ecological and evolutionary drivers of haemoplasma infection and bacterial genotype sharing in a Neotropical bat community
title_full_unstemmed Ecological and evolutionary drivers of haemoplasma infection and bacterial genotype sharing in a Neotropical bat community
title_short Ecological and evolutionary drivers of haemoplasma infection and bacterial genotype sharing in a Neotropical bat community
title_sort ecological and evolutionary drivers of haemoplasma infection and bacterial genotype sharing in a neotropical bat community
topic ORIGINAL ARTICLES
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8299350/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32243630
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/mec.15422
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