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Co-infections mask pathogen-specific associations with the gut microbiota in wild voles.

Research Highlight: Brila, I., Lavirinienko, A., Tukalenko, E., Kallio, E. R., Mappes, T. & Watts, P. C. (2022). Idiosyncratic effects of coinfection on the association between systemic pathogens and the gut microbiota of a wild rodent, the bank vole (Myodes glareolus). Journal of Animal Ecology, https://besjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1365-2656.13869. Interactions between pathogens and host-associated microbial communities can influence host fitness, disease progression and pathogen emergence. The vast majority of studies characterize interactions between single pathogens and bacterial commensals, yet co-infections with multiple pathogens are the norm in nature. In their paper on pathogen-microbiome interactions, Brila et al. (2022) examine how co-infections with four systemic pathogens associate with the gut microbiota in wild bank voles. Building on a series of tests, the authors show that excluding co-infection information from statistical models masks pathogen-specific patterns and confounds interpretations. This paper advances on previous studies by generating surveillance data on a phylogenetically diverse suite of vole pathogens to address the question as to whether pathogens exhibit unique or universal associations with gut commensals. They report that even bacterial pathogens with similar transmission ecology have divergent associations with gut microbes, and highlight that a mechanistic understanding of host-pathogen interactions is necessary for decoding the diverse consequences for gut microbial communities.

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