| Literature DB >> 36100860 |
Christina Næsborg-Nielsen1, Raphael Eisenhofer2,3, Tamieka A Fraser4,5, Vicky Wilkinson4, Christopher P Burridge4, Scott Carver4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Sarcoptes scabiei is globally distributed and one of the most impactful mammalian ectoparasites. Sarcoptic mange, caused by infection with S. scabiei, causes disruption of the epidermis and its bacterial microbiota, but its effects on host fungal microbiota and on the microbiota of marsupials in general have not been studied. Here, we (i) examine bacterial and fungal microbiota changes associated with mange in wild bare-nosed wombats (BNWs) and (ii) evaluate whether opportunistic pathogens are potentiated by S. scabiei infection in this species.Entities:
Keywords: Bare-nosed wombat; Corynebacterium; Debaryomyces; Dysbiosis; Microbiota; Pseudogymnascus; Sarcoptes scabiei; Sarcoptic mange; Staphylococcus sciuri
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36100860 PMCID: PMC9472346 DOI: 10.1186/s13071-022-05452-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parasit Vectors ISSN: 1756-3305 Impact factor: 4.047
Fig. 1Wombat skin microbial diversity grouped by mange severity. ASV richness of 16S (A) and ITS2 (B). Results from Tukey’s HSD tests for pairwise comparison between mange groups are shown in brackets above boxplots; ns = not significantly different, * = post hoc P < 0.05, ** = post hoc P < 0.01. Horizontal lines in the boxes represent the median values; the lower and upper bounds of the boxes represent 25th and 75th percentiles, respectively. Dots represent samples (several samples per wombat ID)
Fig. 2NMDS plots of Bray-Curtis Dissimilarity Index for A bacterial and B fungal microbial communities from bare-nosed wombats (BNW) with different mange severities. Blue = confidently healthy BNWs; orange = mangy BNWs; red = severe mange-affected BNWs. Each point represents a single sample
Fig. 3A Family-level microbial taxonomic bar chart of the ten most abundant families collapsed by wombat-id and sectioned into disease severity (confidently healthy, mangy, and severe mange); B notable bacterial taxa associated with mange severity. Observed changes in bacterial composition across severity groupings and individual bare-nosed wombats. Heatmap of selected bacterial genus
Fig. 4A Family-level fungal taxonomic bar chart of the ten most abundant families collapsed by wombat-id and sectioned into disease severity (confidently healthy, mangy, and severe mange); B notable fungal taxa associated with mange severity. Observed changes in fungal communities across severity groupings and individual bare-nosed wombats illustrated in a heatmap of selected fungal genus
Syntheses of bacterial microbiota taxa changes (increased and reduced) associated sarcoptic mange disease in bare-nosed wombats (this study), humans, canids, pigs, and Iberian ibex
| Bare-nosed wombats (this study) | Humans | N. American Canids [ | Pigs [ | Iberian ibex | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ↑ | |||||
| ↓ | Microbial diversity | NA | Microbial diversity | Microbial diversity | NA |
NA not mentioned
aNo healthy controls included in the study