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Benzo[a]pyrene stress impacts adaptive strategies and ecological functions of earthworm intestinal viromes

The ISME Journal 2023 68 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 65 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
José Luís Balcázar, Pedro J. J. Alvarez, Pingfeng Yu, Feng Sheng Hu, Mingming Sun, Rong Xia

Summary

This study examined how benzo[a]pyrene, a toxic chemical found in pollution, affects the viruses living in earthworm intestines and disrupts their ecological functions. While focused on earthworms rather than humans, the research is relevant because microplastics can carry chemicals like benzo[a]pyrene into soil ecosystems. The study shows how pollutant-laden microplastics could disrupt soil health and the organisms that maintain it.

The earthworm gut virome influences the structure and function of the gut microbiome, which in turn influences worm health and ecological functions. However, despite its ecological and soil quality implications, it remains elusive how earthworm intestinal phages respond to different environmental stress, such as soil pollution. Here we used metagenomics and metatranscriptomics to investigate interactions between the worm intestinal phages and their bacteria under different benzo[a]pyrene (BaP) concentrations. Low-level BaP (0.1 mg kg<sup>-1</sup>) stress stimulated microbial metabolism (1.74-fold to control), and enhanced the antiphage defense system (n = 75) against infection (8 phage-host pairs). Low-level BaP exposure resulted in the highest proportion of lysogenic phages (88%), and prophages expressed auxiliary metabolic genes (AMGs) associated with nutrient transformation (e.g., amino acid metabolism). In contrast, high-level BaP exposure (200 mg kg<sup>-1</sup>) disrupted microbial metabolism and suppressed the antiphage systems (n = 29), leading to the increase in phage-bacterium association (37 phage-host pairs) and conversion of lysogenic to lytic phages (lysogenic ratio declined to 43%). Despite fluctuating phage-bacterium interactions, phage-encoded AMGs related to microbial antioxidant and pollutant degradation were enriched, apparently to alleviate pollution stress. Overall, these findings expand our knowledge of complex phage-bacterium interactions in pollution-stressed worm guts, and deepen our understanding of the ecological and evolutionary roles of phages.

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