Spatial patterns of coevolution in multispecies host-parasite interactions

Lead Research Organisation: UNIVERSITY OF EXETER
Department Name: Biosciences

Abstract

Infectious diseases such as Malaria and Swine Flu continue to cause major problems to human health while viral diseases, such as Foot and Mouth, and bacterial pathogens, like Leaf Blight, are a major threat to our food supply. Similarly, infectious diseases are widespread in nature and pose a severe threat to our environment. Since these diseases cause significant harm to their plant or animal hosts they, like all other organisms, evolve through time. The ability of bacterial pathogens to evolve resistance to antibiotics is of increasing concern and has fuelled a continued search for alternative ways to control the spread of disease. One promising alternative is the use of bacteriophages (viruses that infect and burst open bacterial cells) to control the growth of bacterial populations. 'Phage therapy', in which combinations of bacteriophage viruses are used to target and infect specific pathogenic strains of bacteria, is beginning to emerge as a safe and commercially viable management strategy. Of course, bacterial hosts can also evolve to defend themselves against parasites, such as phage, and it is thus crucial to study the 'coevolution' between phage and their bacterial hosts. My proposal will examine a number of key issues central to understanding host-parasite coevolution. First, I will determine whether phage are coevolving with the bacterial pathogen, Pseudomonas syringae within leaves of tomato plants (where the bacteria is an important agricultural pathogen) and within the xylem or phloem of horse chestnut trees (where the bacteria is causing bleeding canker disease and threatening natural populations). I am using these two systems so that I can compare the interaction between bacteria and phage in nature with results from controlled, laboratory experiments, allowing me to directly investigate the process and implications of coevolution. I will examine both how the plant environment influences the coevolution between bacteria and phage and how infection by phage influences the amount of damage that the bacteria cause to their plant host. This work will be critical to evaluating the long-term implications of phage therapy as a mechanism for controlling bacterial disease. Further, this research will emphasise that coevolution is often more complex than simple, two species interactions and that understanding multi-species interactions is key to making predictions of how diseases will evolve in nature.

Publications

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Antonovics J (2013) The origin of specificity by means of natural selection: evolved and nonhost resistance in host-pathogen interactions. in Evolution; international journal of organic evolution

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Brockhurst MA (2013) Experimental coevolution of species interactions. in Trends in ecology & evolution

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Koskella B (2013) Phage-mediated selection on microbiota of a long-lived host. in Current biology : CB

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Meaden S (2013) Exploring the risks of phage application in the environment. in Frontiers in microbiology

 
Description The three years of my NERC fellowship have been spent both on developing an experimental system in which to examine bacteria-phage interactions in vivo using tomato plants, and measuring coevolutionary change of bacteria and phages in the phyllosphere of horse chestnut trees. The key findings have been that: (1) phages in the horse chestnut phyllosphere range from highly specific to broad host range, including the causal agent of bleeding canker disease; (2) bacterial communities respond to phage-mediated selection within natural tree populations over the course of a single season, and phages are capable of counter-adapting to overcome this resistance over very short timescales (within a month), and (3) that phage application as a mechanism for treating bacteria infecting tomato plants will likely benefit from the application of multiple phages, for which the costs of resistance in plants are exacerbated relative to the costs observed for single phages or in the laboratory.
Exploitation Route I am working in collaboration with other groups in the UK to determine the most effective method for application of phages to treat bacterial pathogens of plants. This work includes incorporation of evolutionary theory in order to take advantage of costs associated with resistance to phage to hinder the spread of resistance across time. The results have some key applications to the use of bacteriophages as a biocontrol of plant pathogens. Given the rapid adaptation of phages to their bacterial hosts, it is clear that they hold great potential as therapeutic agents. However, it is also clear that their bacterial hosts are capable of rapidly evolving resistance over short timescales.
Sectors Agriculture, Food and Drink,Environment

URL http://brittkoskella.wordpress.com/
 
Description I have presented the key findings from this fellowship at a number of international and national meetings, and have shared the key recommendations with policy makers preparing to create the EU rules and regulations for the use of bacteriophages in agriculture.
First Year Of Impact 2013
Sector Agriculture, Food and Drink,Environment