Abstract

The widespread failure of anthelmintic drugs against nematodes of veterinary interest requires novel control strategies. Selective treatment of the most susceptible individuals could reduce drug selection pressure but requires appropriate biomarkers of the intrinsic susceptibility potential. To date, this has been missing in livestock species. Here, we selected Welsh ponies with divergent intrinsic susceptibility (measured by their egg excretion levels) to cyathostomin infection and found that their divergence was sustained across a 10-year time window. Using this unique set of individuals, we monitored variations in their blood cell populations, plasma metabolites and faecal microbiota over a grazing season to isolate core differences between their respective responses under worm-free or natural infection conditions. Our analyses identified the concomitant rise in plasma phenylalanine level and faecal Prevotella abundance and the reduction in circulating monocyte counts as biomarkers of the need for drug treatment (egg excretion above 200 eggs/g). This biological signal was replicated in other independent populations. We also unravelled an immunometabolic network encompassing plasma beta-hydroxybutyrate level, short-chain fatty acid producing bacteria and circulating neutrophils that forms the discriminant baseline between susceptible and resistant individuals. Altogether our observations open new perspectives on the susceptibility of equids to strongylid infection and leave scope for both new biomarkers of infection and nutritional intervention.

Highlights

  • The widespread failure of anthelmintic drugs against nematodes of veterinary interest requires novel control strategies

  • Our prediction achieved an accuracy of 85%

  • We selected resistant and susceptible ponies based on their Faecal Egg Count (FEC) and confirmed that their divergence in egg excretion was sustained over a 10-year time window

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The widespread failure of anthelmintic drugs against nematodes of veterinary interest requires novel control strategies. We selected Welsh ponies with divergent intrinsic susceptibility (measured by their egg excretion levels) to cyathostomin infection and found that their divergence was sustained across a 10-year time window Using this unique set of individuals, we monitored variations in their blood cell populations, plasma metabolites and faecal microbiota over a grazing season to isolate core differences between their respective responses under worm-free or natural infection conditions. Horse resistance to strongylid infection is defined as the ability to control strongyle life-cycle This expands the strict concept of host resistance—limiting parasite worm b­ urden22—by accounting for epidemiological consequences of reduced pasture contamination with free-living stages. The genetic architecture of this trait has not been defined in equids, indications from ruminant species would be in favour of a polygenic ­architecture[23,24,25] defining a stronger type 2 cytokinic polarization in resistant ­individuals[26,27]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call