Abstract

Aeromonas sobria is a mesophilic motile aeromonad currently depicted as an opportunistic pathogen, despite increasing evidence of mutualistic interactions in salmonid fish. However, the determinants of its host-microbe associations, either mutualistic or pathogenic, remain less understood than for other aeromonad species. On one side, there is an over-representation of pathogenic interactions in the A. sobria literature, of which only three articles to date report mutualistic interactions; on the other side, genomic characterization of this species is still fairly incomplete as only two draft genomes were published prior to the present work. Consequently, no study specifically investigated the biodiversity of A. sobria. In fact, the investigation of A. sobria as a species complex may have been clouded by: (i) confusion with A. veronii biovar sobria because of their similar biochemical profiles, and (ii) the intrinsic low resolution of previous studies based on 16S rRNA gene sequences and multilocus sequence typing. So far, the only high-resolution, phylogenomic studies of the genus Aeromonas included one A. sobria strain (CECT 4245 / Popoff 208), making it impossible to robustly conclude on the phylogenetic intra-species diversity and the positioning among other Aeromonas species. To further understand the biodiversity and the spectrum of host-microbe interactions in A. sobria as well as its potential genomic diversity, we assessed the genomic and phenotypic heterogeneity among five A. sobria strains: two clinical isolates recovered from infected fish (JF2635 and CECT 4245), one from an infected amphibian (08005) and two recently isolated brook charr probionts (TM12 and TM18) which inhibit in vitro growth of A. salmonicida subsp. salmonicida (a salmonid fish pathogen). A phylogenomic assessment including 2,154 softcore genes corresponding to 946,687 variable sites from 33 Aeromonas genomes confirms the status of A. sobria as a distinct species divided in two subclades, with 100% bootstrap support. The phylogenomic split of A. sobria in two subclades is corroborated by a deep dichotomy between all five A. sobria strains in terms of inhibitory effect against A. salmonicida subsp. salmonicida, gene contents and codon usage. Finally, the antagonistic effect of A. sobria strains TM12 and TM18 suggests novel control methods against A. salmonicida subsp. salmonicida.

Highlights

  • To increase our knowledge about the spectrum of host– microbe interactions in A. sobria as well as its biodiversity, we report the comparative phenotypic and genomic analysis of five host-associated A. sobria strains including two mutualistic strains with strong in vitro antagonistic effect against A. salmonicida subsp. salmonicida

  • Both strains had strong, yet qualitatively different in vitro inhibitory effects against fish pathogen A. salmonicida subsp. salmonicida (Table 2). This finding was interesting because two A. sobria strains were recovered from healthy specimens, yet had an inhibitory effect against A. salmonicida subsp. salmonicida which is part of the resident brook charr microbiota (DallaireDufresne et al, 2014)

  • We assessed the genomic and phenotypic heterogeneity among five A. sobria strains: two brook charr probionts (TM12 and TM18) which inhibit in vitro growth of A. salmonicida subsp. salmonicida, and three clinical isolates recovered from infected fish (JF2635 and CECT 4245) and an infected amphibian (08005)

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

There are other relevant Aeromonas species complexes whose diversity and complexity has not been as thoroughly characterized To this respect, one example of interest is Aeromonas sobria (sensu Popoff and Véron, 1976), a mesophilic motile aeromonad currently depicted as an opportunistic pathogen of freshwater fish, amphibians and reptiles (Wahli et al, 2005; Janda and Abbott, 2010; Austin and Austin, 2012b; Yang Q.-H. et al, 2017). To increase our knowledge about the spectrum of host– microbe interactions in A. sobria as well as its biodiversity, we report the comparative phenotypic and genomic analysis of five host-associated A. sobria strains including two mutualistic strains with strong in vitro antagonistic effect against A. salmonicida subsp. Genome sequencing and comparative analyses of these strains revealed unexpected heterogeneity between all five A. sobria strains in terms of phylogeny, codon usage and gene contents, which closely correlates with their phenotype regarding their inhibitory effect against A. salmonicida subsp. salmonicida

MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
CONCLUSION

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