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KREMER Natacha

  • Laboratoire de Biométrie et Biologie Evolutive, Université Lyon 1 / CNRS, Villeurbannce, France
  • Ecology, Evolution, Genetics/Genomics, Insecta, Molecular biology, Symbiosis
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Review:  1

Areas of expertise
RESEARCH INTERESTS: The aim of my scientific research is to bring an evolutionary perspective to the study of symbiosis, through an understanding of the molecular interactions between partners. I'm currently studying processes and mechanisms associated with rapid evolution of the fly/Wolbachia association in response to stresses (oxidative stress, viral infection). CURRENT POSITION (since 2014): Permanent research position at the CNRS (Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, section 27). Laboratory of Biometry and Evolutionary Biology. UMR CNRS 5558, University of Lyon (Lyon 1). EDUCATION: 2010-14 Postdoc University Madison, WI, USA. “Establishment and maintenance of the squid/vibrio symbiosis”. Advisor: Pr. M. McFall-Ngai (Medical, Microbiology & Immunology department). 2005-09 Ph. D. University Lyon 1, France. “Evolution of dependence in Wolbachia symbioses: Study of the genus Asobara (Hymenoptera: Braconidae)”. Advisor: Dr. F. Vavre (LBBE) + Teaching position in genetics (64 h / year); University Lyon 1. 2003-05 Education at the École Normale Supérieure (Paris). Master’s degree ‘Interdisciplinary Approaches of Life Science’ Research training at: Laboratory of Biometry and Evolutionary Biology. University Lyon 1 / Dr. F. Vavre; Laboratory of Ecology, ENS, Paris (France) / Dr. M. van Baalen; Laboratory of Evolutive, Medical Molecular Genetics, Paris (France) / Dr. F. Taddei; Evolutionary Biology Centre, Uppsala (Sweden) / Pr. G. Arnqvist, Dr. A. Maklakov; Institute of Ecology, Lausanne (Switzerland) / Pr. L. Keller, Pr. M. Chapuisat.

Review:  1

26 Apr 2023
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Microbiome mediated tolerance to biotic stressors: a case study of the interaction between a toxic cyanobacterium and an oomycete-like infection in Daphnia magna

Multi-stress responses depend on the microbiome in the planktonic crustacean Daphnia

Recommended by and based on reviews by Natacha Kremer and 2 anonymous reviewers

The critical role that gut microbiota play in many aspects of an animal’s life, including pathogen resistance, detoxification, digestion, and nutritional physiology, is becoming more and more apparent (Engel and Moran 2013; Lindsay et al., 2020). Gut microbiota recruitment and maintenance can be largely affected by the surrounding environment (Chandler et al., 2011; Callens et al., 2020). The environment may thus dictate gut microbiota composition and diversity, which in turn can affect organismal responses to stress. Only few studies have, however, taken the gut microbiota into account to estimate life histories in response to multiple stressors in aquatic systems (Macke et al., 2016). 

Houwenhuyse et al., investigate how the microbiome affects life histories in response to ecologically relevant single and multiple biotic stressors (an oomycete-like parasite, and a toxic cyanobacterium) in Daphnia magna (Houwenhuyse et al., 2023). Daphnia is an excellent model, because this aquatic system lends itself extremely well for gut microbiota transplantation and manipulation. This is due to the possibility to sterilize eggs (making them free of bacteria), horizontal transmission of bacteria from the environment, and the relative ease of culturing genetically similar Daphnia clones in large numbers. 

The authors use an elegant experimental design to show that the Daphnia gut microbial community differs when derived from a laboratory versus natural inoculum, the latter being more diverse. The authors subsequently show that key life history traits (survival, fecundity, and body size) depend on the stressors (and combination thereof), the microbiota (structure and diversity), and Daphnia genotype. A key finding is that Daphnia exposed to both biotic stressors show an antagonistic interaction effect on survival (being higher), but only in individuals containing laboratory gut microbiota. The exact mechanism remains to be determined, but the authors propose several interesting hypotheses as to why Daphnia with more diverse gut microbiota do less well. This could be due, for example, to increased inter-microbe competition or an increased chance of contracting opportunistic, parasitic bacteria. For Daphnia with less diverse laboratory gut microbiota, a monopolizing species may be particularly beneficial for stress tolerance. Alongside these interesting findings, the paper also provides extensive information about the gut microbiota composition (available in the supplementary files), which is a very useful resource for other researchers. 

Overall, this study reveals that multiple, interacting factors affect the performance of Daphnia under stressful conditions. Of importance is that laboratory studies may be based on simpler microbiota systems, meaning that stress responses measured in the laboratory may not accurately reflect what is happening in nature. 

REFERENCES

Callens M, De Meester L, Muylaert K, Mukherjee S, Decaestecker E. The bacterioplankton community composition and a host genotype dependent occurrence of taxa shape the Daphnia magna gut bacterial community. FEMS Microbiology Ecology. 2020;96(8):fiaa128. https://doi.org/10.1093/femsec/fiaa128

Chandler JA, Lang JM, Bhatnagar S, Eisen JA, Kopp A. Bacterial communities of diverse Drosophila species: ecological context of a host-microbe model system. PLOS Genetics. 2011;7(9):e1002272. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1002272

Engel P, Moran NA. The gut microbiota of insects - diversity in structure and function. FEMS Microbiology Reviews. 2013;37(5):699-735. https://doi.org/10.1111/1574-6976.12025

Houwenhuyse S, Bulteel L, Vanoverberghe I, Krzynowek A, Goel N et al. Microbiome mediated tolerance to biotic stressors: a case study of the interaction between a toxic cyanobacterium and an oomycete-like infection in Daphnia magna. 2023. OSF, ver. 2 peer-reviewed and recommended by Peer Community in Zoology. https://doi.org/10.31219/osf.io/9n4mg

Lindsay EC, Metcalfe NB, Llewellyn MS. The potential role of the gut microbiota in shaping host energetics and metabolic rate. Journal of Animal Ecology. 2020;89(11):2415-2426. https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2656.13327

Macke E, Tasiemski A, Massol F, Callens M, Decaestecker E. Life history and eco-evolutionary dynamics in light of the gut microbiota. Oikos. 2017;126(4):508-531. https://doi.org/10.1111/oik.03900

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KREMER Natacha

  • Laboratoire de Biométrie et Biologie Evolutive, Université Lyon 1 / CNRS, Villeurbannce, France
  • Ecology, Evolution, Genetics/Genomics, Insecta, Molecular biology, Symbiosis
  • recommender

Recommendations:  0

Review:  1

Areas of expertise
RESEARCH INTERESTS: The aim of my scientific research is to bring an evolutionary perspective to the study of symbiosis, through an understanding of the molecular interactions between partners. I'm currently studying processes and mechanisms associated with rapid evolution of the fly/Wolbachia association in response to stresses (oxidative stress, viral infection). CURRENT POSITION (since 2014): Permanent research position at the CNRS (Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, section 27). Laboratory of Biometry and Evolutionary Biology. UMR CNRS 5558, University of Lyon (Lyon 1). EDUCATION: 2010-14 Postdoc University Madison, WI, USA. “Establishment and maintenance of the squid/vibrio symbiosis”. Advisor: Pr. M. McFall-Ngai (Medical, Microbiology & Immunology department). 2005-09 Ph. D. University Lyon 1, France. “Evolution of dependence in Wolbachia symbioses: Study of the genus Asobara (Hymenoptera: Braconidae)”. Advisor: Dr. F. Vavre (LBBE) + Teaching position in genetics (64 h / year); University Lyon 1. 2003-05 Education at the École Normale Supérieure (Paris). Master’s degree ‘Interdisciplinary Approaches of Life Science’ Research training at: Laboratory of Biometry and Evolutionary Biology. University Lyon 1 / Dr. F. Vavre; Laboratory of Ecology, ENS, Paris (France) / Dr. M. van Baalen; Laboratory of Evolutive, Medical Molecular Genetics, Paris (France) / Dr. F. Taddei; Evolutionary Biology Centre, Uppsala (Sweden) / Pr. G. Arnqvist, Dr. A. Maklakov; Institute of Ecology, Lausanne (Switzerland) / Pr. L. Keller, Pr. M. Chapuisat.