4.6 Article

Effect of Caging on Cryptosporidium parvum Proliferation in Mice

期刊

MICROORGANISMS
卷 10, 期 6, 页码 -

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MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/microorganisms10061242

关键词

Cryptosporidium; cryptosporidiosis; microbiota; constrained ordination; dysbiosis

资金

  1. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases [R21AI144521]

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This study investigated the association between the severity of cryptosporidiosis and the fecal microbiota. It found that individually caged mice had lower levels of infection compared to mice caged in groups, and that there was a negative relationship between microbiota diversity and susceptibility to Cryptosporidium parvum infection.
Cryptosporidiosis is an enteric infection caused by several protozoan species in the genus Cryptosporidium (phylum Apicomplexa). Immunosuppressed mice are commonly used to model this infection. Surprisingly, for a pathogen like Cryptosporidium parvum, which is readily transmitted fecal-orally, mice housed in the same cage can develop vastly different levels of infection, ranging from undetectable to lethal. The motivation for this study was to investigate this phenomenon and assess the association between the severity of cryptosporidiosis and the fecal microbiota. To this aim, the association between severity of cryptosporidiosis and caging (group caged vs. individually caged) and between the microbiota taxonomy and the course of the infection was examined. In contrast to mice caged in groups of four, a majority of mice caged individually did not excrete a detectable level of oocysts. Microbiota alpha diversity in samples collected between three days prior to infection and one day post-infection was negatively correlated with the severity of cryptosporidiosis, suggesting a causal negative relationship between microbiota diversity and susceptibility to C. parvum.

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