Top Banner
Evolution and Evolution and Ecology of Ecology of Pathogens Pathogens Martin Polz Martin Polz Civil & Environmental Engineering Civil & Environmental Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Massachusetts Institute of Technology Technology
40

Evolution and Ecology of Pathogens Martin Polz Civil & Environmental Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Dec 15, 2015

Download

Documents

Wyatt Parkhouse
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Evolution and Ecology of Pathogens Martin Polz Civil & Environmental Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Evolution and Evolution and Ecology of Ecology of PathogensPathogens

Martin PolzMartin Polz

Civil & Environmental EngineeringCivil & Environmental Engineering

Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyMassachusetts Institute of Technology

Page 2: Evolution and Ecology of Pathogens Martin Polz Civil & Environmental Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

OutlineOutline

Emergence of pathogensEmergence of pathogens Global importance of microorganismsGlobal importance of microorganisms What are pathogens?What are pathogens? Evolution of pathogenesisEvolution of pathogenesis

Re-emergence of pathogensRe-emergence of pathogens Antibiotic resistanceAntibiotic resistance CholeraCholera

ConclusionsConclusions

Page 3: Evolution and Ecology of Pathogens Martin Polz Civil & Environmental Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Germs, germs everywhereEven on a little pear,

Germs germs all around,Even on the dirty ground.

Germs, germs make me sick,Especially on a candy stick.Germs, germs are so small,

Even on a bouncy ball.

Candice's Germ Poem

Page 4: Evolution and Ecology of Pathogens Martin Polz Civil & Environmental Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Microbial communities drive biogeochemical cycles…

Page 5: Evolution and Ecology of Pathogens Martin Polz Civil & Environmental Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

100human activities

140biological

fixation

200denitrification

SOIL

ATMOSPHERE

OCEANS

15biological

fixation

140denitrification

1200internal cycling 8000

internal cycling

10burial

36river flow

<3fixation inlightening

groundwater

Example: The Nitrogen Cycle

Page 6: Evolution and Ecology of Pathogens Martin Polz Civil & Environmental Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

?human activities

140biological

fixation

200denitrification

SOIL

ATMOSPHERE

OCEANS

15biological

fixation

140denitrification

1200internal cycling 8000

internal cycling

?burial

?river flow

<3fixation inlightening

groundwater

Nitrogen Cycle Without Microbes

All processes slow.Would life be possible?

Page 7: Evolution and Ecology of Pathogens Martin Polz Civil & Environmental Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

MicrobesMicrobes

•Bacteria•Fungi•Protists•Viruses

Page 8: Evolution and Ecology of Pathogens Martin Polz Civil & Environmental Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

BacteriaBacteria

•Small•Efficient•Biochemically diverse•Fast growth

Page 9: Evolution and Ecology of Pathogens Martin Polz Civil & Environmental Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Marine

Freshwater

Sediments

Subsurface sediments(0-3,000 m)

Animal guts

Cells/ ml or gx106

Total cellsx1026

0.5

1.0

4,600

0.34-200

1-105

1,000

1.5

170

38,000

0.0004

(Whitman et al. 1998)

Bacteria are everywhereBacteria are everywhere

Page 10: Evolution and Ecology of Pathogens Martin Polz Civil & Environmental Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Global bacterial biomass (Pg of Global bacterial biomass (Pg of C)C)

Soil and Aquatic

Plants Bacteria

Subsurface

Terrestrial

Marine

560

1.8

26

2.2

22-215

303

Microbial biomass rivals plant biomassbut has higher turnover

Page 11: Evolution and Ecology of Pathogens Martin Polz Civil & Environmental Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

How many bacterialHow many bacterialspecies are there?species are there?

Wilson 1988

Total number species: ~ 1.4 millionBacteria: ~3,500

Hammond 1995

Total number species: ~ 11 millionBacteria: ~10 million

Page 12: Evolution and Ecology of Pathogens Martin Polz Civil & Environmental Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

The great plate count The great plate count anomalyanomaly

microbial community

plating

DAPI stained marine water sample

< 1% of observable bacteria grow on standard culture media

Page 13: Evolution and Ecology of Pathogens Martin Polz Civil & Environmental Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Genetic diversityGenetic diversity

Total nucleic acids

16S ribosomal RNA genes

Sequences

Diversity andevolutionary relationships

Identificationand quantification

Page 14: Evolution and Ecology of Pathogens Martin Polz Civil & Environmental Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Page 15: Evolution and Ecology of Pathogens Martin Polz Civil & Environmental Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Molecular approach:

• great diversity of microbes

• pathogens only a minor componentof microbial diversity

• allows understanding of evolutionof pathogenesis

Page 16: Evolution and Ecology of Pathogens Martin Polz Civil & Environmental Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Emergence of pathogensEmergence of pathogens

Page 17: Evolution and Ecology of Pathogens Martin Polz Civil & Environmental Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

What is a pathogen?

An evolutionary view.

Example: Escherichia coli (E. coli)

Normally a harmless gut bacterium but…Eterotoxigenic strains

Enteropathogenic strainsEnteroinvasive strains

Enterohemorrhagic strainsEnteroaggregative strains

Uropathogenic strains

Page 18: Evolution and Ecology of Pathogens Martin Polz Civil & Environmental Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Genome analysis provides answer

Strains closely relatedGenome structure similar

But….

Insertions of ‘foreign’ DNA= pathogenicity islands

Comparative analysis:

Page 19: Evolution and Ecology of Pathogens Martin Polz Civil & Environmental Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Comparison harmless andpathogenic E. coli strains

A B

A B

C

C

E. coli K12

E. coli O157:H7

Foreign DNA= locus of enterocyte effacement

Responsible for pathogenicity:allows attachment and toxin productions

A harmless bacterium has become a pathogenby ‘stealing’ DNA from another bacterium!

Page 20: Evolution and Ecology of Pathogens Martin Polz Civil & Environmental Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Mechanisms of gene transfer:

1 Transformation: uptake of DNA from environment2 Transduction: DNA transfer by viruses3 Conjugation: plasmid transfer between bacterial cells

1

2

3

Can all transfer genes from other bacteriathat can become incorporated into genome

Page 21: Evolution and Ecology of Pathogens Martin Polz Civil & Environmental Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Fate of transferred genes:

RecA system = recombination into genomedependent on sequence similarity

% sequence differencerecom

bin

ati

on

rate

Page 22: Evolution and Ecology of Pathogens Martin Polz Civil & Environmental Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

How often does gene transfer happen?

Gene transfer is raree.g., transduction by viruses insert

foreign DNA every 108 virus infections

But….

Microbes have very large populationse.g., gene transfer in marine environment

~20 million billion times per second!

Genes must be advantageous to recipient….

Page 23: Evolution and Ecology of Pathogens Martin Polz Civil & Environmental Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Ecology of pathogenesis

Bacteria grow fast

High population densities

Great competition for resources

Pathogen = normal bacterium that has gained access to a new resource through new genes

--> Competitive advantage

Page 24: Evolution and Ecology of Pathogens Martin Polz Civil & Environmental Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Re-emergence of Re-emergence of pathogenspathogens

Page 25: Evolution and Ecology of Pathogens Martin Polz Civil & Environmental Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Example 1: Antibiotics

Antibiotics - natural warfare

common resource

species 1 species 2

Page 26: Evolution and Ecology of Pathogens Martin Polz Civil & Environmental Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Example 1: Antibiotics

Antibiotics - natural warfare

common resource

species 1 species 2

antibiotic

Page 27: Evolution and Ecology of Pathogens Martin Polz Civil & Environmental Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Example 1: Antibiotics

Antibiotics - natural warfare

common resource

species 1 species 2

antibiotic

Page 28: Evolution and Ecology of Pathogens Martin Polz Civil & Environmental Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Example 1: Antibiotics

Antibiotics - natural warfare

common resource

species 1

Page 29: Evolution and Ecology of Pathogens Martin Polz Civil & Environmental Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Antibiotic resistance

Bacteria have evolved resistance genes to antibioticsLocated on plasmids

Page 30: Evolution and Ecology of Pathogens Martin Polz Civil & Environmental Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Plasmid encoded resistance is easily transferredbetween species because plasmids are mobile

Occurrence usually low unless selection throughwidespread antibiotic use

Page 31: Evolution and Ecology of Pathogens Martin Polz Civil & Environmental Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Antibiotics overuse creates ‘Superbugs’

50 million tons antibiotics per year

‘Superbugs’ resistant to most antibiotics

Example: Tuberculosis

2.5 million deaths

Mycobacterium tuberculosis

increasingly resistant

Page 32: Evolution and Ecology of Pathogens Martin Polz Civil & Environmental Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Example 2: Cholera and climate

Vibrio cholerae and other vibriosubiquitous in marine, coastal waters

Genetically similar non-pathogenic andpathogenic strains co-exist

V.cholera

Page 33: Evolution and Ecology of Pathogens Martin Polz Civil & Environmental Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

VibrioVibrio species identified as species identified as agents of human diseaseagents of human disease

Clinical presentations a

SpeciesGI Wound/ear

InfectionSepticemia

V. alginolyticus ++V. carchariae +V. cholerae Non-O1 ++ + + O1 ++ (+)V. cincinnatiensis +V. damsela ++V. fluvialis ++V. furnissii ++V. hollisae ++ (+)V. marinus +V. metschnikovii ? ?V. mimicus ++ +V. parahaemolyticus ++ + (+)V. vulnificus + ++ ++

a GI, gastrointestinal; ++, most common; (+) very rare.

Page 34: Evolution and Ecology of Pathogens Martin Polz Civil & Environmental Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Seasonal cholera in CalcuttaSeasonal cholera in Calcutta

(Sharma, 1998)

Page 35: Evolution and Ecology of Pathogens Martin Polz Civil & Environmental Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

VibrioVibrio infections infections linked to El Nino linked to El Nino

Dhaka, Dhaka, Bangladesh Bangladesh

Cholera cases Cholera cases

Seasonality Seasonality RemovedRemoved

(Pascual, 2000)

Page 36: Evolution and Ecology of Pathogens Martin Polz Civil & Environmental Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Attachment to algae and zooplankton?Temperature dependent growth?

Possible reasons for seasonality

Algal growth= vibrio growth?

Temperature rise= vibrio growth?

Links to global warming and/or pollution

Page 37: Evolution and Ecology of Pathogens Martin Polz Civil & Environmental Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

ConclusionsConclusions

Page 38: Evolution and Ecology of Pathogens Martin Polz Civil & Environmental Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Re-Emergence is an evolutionary/ecological phenomenon

Microbial communities extremely diverseLarge numbers of individuals

Potential for gene transfer

Pathogenesis arises via gene transfer

Result: harmless bacterial species becomes pathogenbecause it gains competitive advantage

Ecological factors (resistance, alternate hosts, climate)may trigger increased incidence of pathogenesis

Page 39: Evolution and Ecology of Pathogens Martin Polz Civil & Environmental Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Outlook for the future

Need to understand environmentalcontext of pathogenesis

Need to understand gene transferrates and diversity of co-occurring

genomes

Page 40: Evolution and Ecology of Pathogens Martin Polz Civil & Environmental Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Thanks to:

Silvia AcinasDan DistelDana HuntVanja KlepacLuisa MarcelinoChanathip PharinoRamahi Sarma-RupavtarmJanelle Thompson

NSF, NIH, Seagrant, DOE - Genomes to Life