Towards the generation of gnotobiotic larvae as a tool to investigate the influence of the microbiome on the development of the amphibian immune system
The immune equilibrium model suggests that exposure to microbes during early life primes immune responses for pathogen exposure later in life. While recent studies using a range of gnotobiotic (germ-free) model organisms offer support for this theory, we currently lack a tractable model system for i...
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Zusammenfassung: | The immune equilibrium model suggests that exposure to microbes during
early life primes immune responses for pathogen exposure later in life.
While recent studies using a range of gnotobiotic (germ-free) model
organisms offer support for this theory, we currently lack a tractable
model system for investigating the influence of the microbiome on immune
system development. Here, we used an amphibian species (Xenopus laevis) to
investigate the importance of the microbiome in larval development and
susceptibility to infectious disease later in life. We found that
experimental reductions of the microbiome during embryonic and larval
stages effectively reduced microbial richness, diversity, and altered
community composition in tadpoles prior to metamorphosis. In addition, our
antimicrobial treatments resulted in few negative effects on larval
development, body condition, or survival to metamorphosis. However,
contrary to our predictions, our antimicrobial treatments did not alter
susceptibility to the lethal fungal pathogen Batrachochytrium
dendrobatidis (Bd) in the adult life stage. While our treatments to reduce
the microbiome during early development did not play a critical role in
determining susceptibility to disease caused by Bd in X. laevis, they
nevertheless indicate that developing a gnotobiotic amphibian model system
may be highly useful for future immunological investigations. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.t76hdr849 |