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Seasonal dynamics of the microbiome-host response to pharmaceuticals and pesticides in Mytilus galloprovincialis farmed in the Northwestern Adriatic Sea

The Science of The Total Environment 2023 22 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 55 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Silvia Franzellitti, Silvia Franzellitti, Silvia Turroni, Nicolò Interino, Giorgia Palladino, Simone Rampelli, Silvia Turroni, Silvia Franzellitti, Daniel Scicchitano, Rajapaksha Haddokara Gedara Rasika Wathsala, Giorgia Palladino, Daniel Scicchitano, Simone Rampelli, Daniel Scicchitano, Giorgia Palladino, Silvia Franzellitti, Rajapaksha Haddokara Gedara Rasika Wathsala, Enrico Nanetti, Marco Candela Enrico Nanetti, Mauro Marini, Letizia Iuffrida, Mauro Marini, Mauro Marini, Mauro Marini, Giorgia Palladino, Silvia Franzellitti, Mauro Marini, Mauro Marini, Marco Candela Mauro Marini, Rajapaksha Haddokara Gedara Rasika Wathsala, Silvia Turroni, Simone Rampelli, Mauro Marini, Marco Candela Marco Candela Daniel Scicchitano, Nicolò Interino, Mauro Marini, Simone Rampelli, Simone Rampelli, Mauro Marini, Mauro Marini, Mauro Marini, Emanuele Porru, Marco Candela Silvia Franzellitti, Marco Candela Silvia Turroni, Marco Candela Emanuele Porru, Marco Candela Jessica Fiori, Silvia Franzellitti, Jessica Fiori, Giorgia Palladino, Marco Candela

Summary

Researchers studied how Mediterranean mussels farmed in the Adriatic Sea respond to pharmaceutical and pesticide pollution across different seasons, examining both the animals' biology and their associated microbiomes. They found that the mussel microbiome plays a significant role in the organisms' response to environmental contaminants, with seasonal variation influencing both pollutant exposure and microbial community composition. The study highlights that understanding microbiome-host interactions is important for assessing how marine organisms cope with chemical pollution.

Marine mussels, especially Mytilus galloprovincialis, are well-established sentinel species, being naturally resistant to the exposure to multiple xenobiotics of natural and anthropogenic origin. Even if the response to multiple xenobiotic exposure is well known at the host level, the role of the mussel-associated microbiome in the animal response to environmental pollution is poorly explored, despite its potential in xenobiotic detoxification and its important role in host development, protection, and adaptation. Here, we characterized the microbiome-host integrative response of M. galloprovincialis in a real-world setting, involving exposure to a complex pattern of emerging pollutants, as occurs in the Northwestern Adriatic Sea. A total of 387 mussel individuals from 3 commercial farms, spanning about 200 km along the Northwestern Adriatic coast, and in 3 different seasons, were collected. Multiresidue analysis (for quantitative xenobiotic determination), transcriptomics (for host physiological response), and metagenomics (for host-associated microbial taxonomical and functional features) analyses were performed on the digestive glands. According to our findings, M. galloprovincialis responds to the presence of the complex pattern of multiple emerging pollutants - including the antibiotics sulfamethoxazole, erythromycin, and tetracycline, the herbicides atrazine and metolachlor, and the insecticide N,N-diethyl-m-toluamide - integrating host defense mechanisms, e.g., through upregulation of transcripts involved in animal metabolic activity, and microbiome-mediated detoxification functions, including microbial functionalities involved in multidrug or tetracycline resistance. Overall, our data highlight the importance of the mussel-associated microbiome as a strategic player for the orchestration of resistance to the multixenobiotic exposure at the holobiont level, providing strategic functionalities for the detoxification of multiple xenobiotic substances, as occurring in real world exposure settings. Complementing the host with microbiome-dependent xenobiotic degradative and resistance genes, the M. galloprovincialis digestive gland associated microbiome can have an important role in the detoxification of emerging pollutants in a context of high anthropogenic pressure, supporting the relevance of mussel systems as potential animal-based bioremediation tool.

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