Abstract

Emerging infectious diseases are a key threat to wildlife. Several fungal skin pathogens have recently emerged and caused widespread mortality in several vertebrate groups, including amphibians, bats, rattlesnakes and humans. White-nose syndrome, caused by the fungal skin pathogen Pseudogymnoascus destructans, threatens several hibernating bat species with extinction and there are few effective treatment strategies. The skin microbiome is increasingly understood to play a large role in determining disease outcome. We isolated bacteria from the skin of four bat species, and co-cultured these isolates with P. destructans to identify bacteria that might inhibit or kill P. destructans. We then conducted two reciprocal challenge experiments in vitro with six bacterial isolates (all in the genus Pseudomonas) to quantify the effect of these bacteria on the growth of P. destructans. All six Pseudomonas isolates significantly inhibited growth of P. destructans compared to non-inhibitory control bacteria, and two isolates performed significantly better than others in suppressing P. destructans growth for at least 35 days. In both challenge experiments, the extent of suppression of P. destructans growth was dependent on the initial concentration of P. destructans and the initial concentration of the bacterial isolate. These results show that bacteria found naturally occurring on bats can inhibit the growth of P. destructans in vitro and should be studied further as a possible probiotic to protect bats from white-nose syndrome. In addition, the presence of these bacteria may influence disease outcomes among individuals, populations, and species.

Highlights

  • Emerging infectious diseases can have devastating impacts on wildlife, and they currently threaten many species with extinction [1,2,3,4]

  • The size of bacterial colonies increased with decreasing initial concentrations of P. destructans (S1 Fig., S4 Table)

  • The results from our two sets of experiments demonstrate that in vivo, bacteria cultured from bats can inhibit the growth of P. destructans

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Summary

Introduction

Emerging infectious diseases can have devastating impacts on wildlife, and they currently threaten many species with extinction [1,2,3,4]. With an increase in anthropogenic disturbance and rise in global trade and transportation, the threat posed by wildlife disease is likely to PLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0121329. Wildlife diseases can be exceedingly challenging to manage because free ranging animals are difficult to treat with drugs or vaccines, and many strategies require constant human intervention[6]. The re-establishment of Black-footed ferrets into their native range required vaccination of adults and young born each year for both plague and canine distemper [7]. New approaches that do not require continued intervention are needed to reduce the impacts of these devastating diseases [8]

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