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Environmental stress promotes the persistence of facultative bacterial symbionts in amoebae

Ecology and Evolution 2023 13 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Zihe Wang, Wei Huang, Yingwen Mai, Yuehui Tian, Bo Wu, Cheng Wang, Qingyun Yan, Zhili He, Longfei Shu

Summary

Researchers found that environmental stresses such as microplastic exposure promote the persistence of bacterial symbionts within amoebae, suggesting that pollution conditions may enhance the role of amoebae as environmental reservoirs for potentially pathogenic bacteria.

Amoebae are one major group of protists that are widely found in natural and engineered environments. They are a significant threat to human health not only because many of them are pathogenic but also due to their unique role as an environmental shelter for pathogens. However, one unsolved issue in the amoeba-bacteria relationship is why so many bacteria live within amoeba hosts while they can also live independently in the environments. By using a facultative amoeba- Paraburkholderia bacteria system, this study shows that facultative bacteria have higher survival rates within amoebae under various environmental stressors. In addition, bacteria survive longer within the amoeba spore than in free living. This study demonstrates that environmental stress can promote the persistence of facultative bacterial symbionts in amoebae. Furthermore, environmental stress may potentially select and produce more amoeba-resisting bacteria, which may increase the biosafety risk related to amoebae and their intracellular bacteria.

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