Hitchhiking of host biology by beneficial symbionts enhances transmission
Basic science published in Sci Rep (2014)
Abstract
Transmission plays a key role in the evolution of symbiosis. Mixed mode transmission combines horizontal and vertical mechanisms for symbiont acquisition. However, features that enable mixed transmission are poorly understood. Here, we determine the mechanistic basis for the recruitment of the beneficial bacterium, Aeromonas veronii by the leech, Hirudo verbana. We demonstrate that host mucosal secretions complement imperfect symbiont vertical transmission. First, we show that the A. veronii population within secretions originates from the host digestive tract and proliferates synchronously with shedding frequency, demonstrating the coupling of partner biology. Furthermore, leeches are attracted to these castings with oral contact proving sufficient for symbiont transmission. Leech attraction to mucus is not affected by the symbiont state of either the host or mucus, suggesting that A. veronii exploits preexisting host behavior and physiological traits. A dual transmission mode, integrating multiple layers of host contributions, may prove evolutionarily advantageous for a wide range of symbioses. Using such a strategy, host infection is ensured, while also providing access to a higher genetic diversity of symbionts. Countless host-associated microbes exhibit mixed mode transmission, supporting the use of the leech symbiosis as a model for enhancing our understanding of the specificity, establishment and persistence of microbiotas.
Abstract sourced from PubMed (NCBI) for the cited record. See the original publication for the authoritative version.
Summary
Aeromonas veronii uses host H. verbana mucus secretion and attraction for mixed-mode horizontal/vertical transmission, demonstrating beneficial symbiont evolution.
Why This Matters for Hirudotherapy
This basic-biology study examined how the medicinal leech Hirudo verbana acquires its beneficial gut bacterium Aeromonas veronii, showing that host mucosal secretions (castings) carry the symbiont from the digestive tract, that leeches are attracted to these castings, and that oral contact is sufficient for transmission — a "mixed mode" combining vertical and horizontal acquisition. For hirudotherapy it is a useful reminder that a medicinal leech is not sterile: its gut and secretions host a defined microbiota, which is directly relevant to understanding bite-site flora and the rationale for never reusing a leech between patients and for monitoring Aeromonas-related infection risk. Honest caveat: this is microbiology/symbiosis research on leech–bacterium ecology, not a study of leech therapy or of the salivary secretome's medicinal compounds, so it informs safety and biology context only and carries no clinical or efficacy claim.
Citation
Hitchhiking of host biology by beneficial symbionts enhances transmission.
Ott BM et al. · Scientific reports, 2014
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