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Dive into the research topics where Pauline D. Scanlan is active.

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Featured researches published by Pauline D. Scanlan.


Ecology Letters | 2011

Host–parasite coevolutionary arms races give way to fluctuating selection

Alex R. Hall; Pauline D. Scanlan; Andrew D. Morgan; Angus Buckling

Host-parasite coevolution is a key driver of biological diversity and parasite virulence, but its effects depend on the nature of coevolutionary dynamics over time. We used phenotypic data from coevolving populations of the bacterium Pseudomonas fluorescens SBW25 and parasitic phage SBW25Φ2, and genetic data from the phage tail fibre gene (implicated in infectivity evolution) to show that arms race dynamics, typical of short-term studies, decelerate over time. We attribute this effect to increasing costs of generalism for phages and bacteria with increasing infectivity and resistance. By contrast, fluctuating selection on individual host and parasite genotypes was maintained over time, becoming increasingly important for the phenotypic properties of parasite and host populations. Given that costs of generalism are reported for many other systems, arms races may generally give way to fluctuating selection in antagonistically coevolving populations.


FEMS Microbiology Ecology | 2014

The microbial eukaryote Blastocystis is a prevalent and diverse member of the healthy human gut microbiota

Pauline D. Scanlan; Christen Rune Stensvold; Mirjana Rajilić-Stojanović; Hans G.H.J. Heilig; Willem M. de Vos; Paul W. O'Toole; Paul D. Cotter

To date, the majority of research into the human gut microbiota has focused on the bacterial fraction of the community. Inevitably, this has resulted in a poor understanding of the diversity and functionality of other intestinal microorganisms in the human gut. One such nonbacterial member is the microbial eukaryote Blastocystis, which has been implicated in the aetiology of a range of different intestinal and extra-intestinal diseases. However, prevalence data from different studies are conflicting, and crucially, there is limited information on its incidence and diversity in healthy individuals. Here, we survey the prevalence, genetic diversity and temporal stability of Blastocystis in a group of healthy adults (n = 105) using a sensitive PCR assay. Blastocystis was present in 56% of our sample set, which is much higher than previously reported from an industrialised county (Ireland). Moreover, a diversity of different subtypes (species) were detected, and Blastocystis was present in a subset of individuals sampled over a period of time between 6 and 10 years, indicating that it is capable of long-term host colonisation. These results show that Blastocystis is a common and diverse member of the healthy gut microbiota, thereby extending our knowledge of the microbial ecology of the healthy human intestine.


Molecular Ecology | 2011

Genetic basis of infectivity evolution in a bacteriophage

Pauline D. Scanlan; Alex R. Hall; Laura D. C. Lopez-Pascua; Angus Buckling

Antagonistic coevolution between hosts and parasites is probably ubiquitous. However, very little is known of the genetic changes associated with parasite infectivity evolution during adaptation to a coevolving host. We followed the phenotypic and genetic changes in a lytic virus population (bacteriophage; phage Φ2) that coevolved with its bacterial host, Pseudomonas fluorescens SBW25. First, we show the rapid evolution of numerous unique phage infectivity phenotypes, and that both phage host range and bacterial resistance to individual phage increased over coevolutionary time. Second, each of the distinct phage phenotypes in our study had a unique genotype, and molecular evolution did not act uniformly across the phage genome during coevolution. In particular, we detected numerous substitutions on the tail fibre gene, which is involved in the first step of the host–parasite interaction: host adsorption. None of the observed mutations could be directly linked with infection against a particular host, suggesting that the phenotypic effects of infectivity mutations are probably epistatic. However, phage genotypes with the broadest host ranges had the largest number of nonsynonymous amino acid changes on genes implicated in infectivity evolution. An understanding of the molecular genetics of phage infectivity has helped to explain the complex phenotypic coevolutionary dynamics in this system.


Trends in Parasitology | 2012

Blastocystis: past pitfalls and future perspectives

Pauline D. Scanlan

Blastocystis is a genetically heterogeneous protist found in the intestinal tract (IT) of many vertebrates, and although it is implicated in a variety of human intestinal disorders, data regarding the clinical relevance of Blastocystis is at best speculative. Several research issues, including a lack of standardization across studies, the potential for intrasubtype variation in pathogenicity, and difficulties associated with diagnostics for many idiopathic disorders of the human IT have led to conflicting reports in support of a role for Blastocystis pathogenicity. Here, several research areas and methodologies are reviewed that if integrated appropriately into a prospective study may prove useful and facilitate a better understanding of the role of Blastocystis in human health and disease.


Molecular Biology and Evolution | 2015

Coevolution with Bacteriophages Drives Genome-Wide Host Evolution and Constrains the Acquisition of Abiotic-Beneficial Mutations

Pauline D. Scanlan; Alex R. Hall; Gordon Blackshields; Ville-P. Friman; Michael R. Davis; Joanna B. Goldberg; Angus Buckling

Studies of antagonistic coevolution between hosts and parasites typically focus on resistance and infectivity traits. However, coevolution could also have genome-wide effects on the hosts due to pleiotropy, epistasis, or selection for evolvability. Here, we investigate these effects in the bacterium Pseudomonas fluorescens SBW25 during approximately 400 generations of evolution in the presence or absence of bacteriophage (coevolution or evolution treatments, respectively). Coevolution resulted in variable phage resistance, lower competitive fitness in the absence of phages, and greater genome-wide divergence both from the ancestor and between replicates, in part due to the evolution of increased mutation rates. Hosts from coevolution and evolution treatments had different suites of mutations. A high proportion of mutations observed in coevolved hosts were associated with a known phage target binding site, the lipopolysaccharide (LPS), and correlated with altered LPS length and phage resistance. Mutations in evolved bacteria were correlated with higher fitness in the absence of phages. However, the benefits of these growth-promoting mutations were completely lost when these bacteria were subsequently coevolved with phages, indicating that they were not beneficial in the presence of resistance mutations (consistent with negative epistasis). Our results show that in addition to affecting genome-wide evolution in loci not obviously linked to parasite resistance, coevolution can also constrain the acquisition of mutations beneficial for growth in the abiotic environment.


Journal of Cystic Fibrosis | 2012

Gut dysbiosis in cystic fibrosis

Pauline D. Scanlan; Angus Buckling; Weidong Kong; Yvette K. Wild; Susan V. Lynch; Freya Harrison

In people with CF, intestinal exocrine malfunction, antibiotic usage [1] and swallowing of infected respiratory mucus [2] likely perturb the normal community of commensal bacteria in the gut. People with CF report various intestinal problems which may be alleviated by probiotic administration [3]. There is also evidence that probiotic bacteria can help people with CF fight respiratory infection [4,5]. However, CF-related gut dysbiosis has only recently been subjected to detailed investigation. Using DGGE and culture-based methods, Duytschaever and colleagues [6] showed that children with CF have a quantitatively and qualitatively different faecal microbiota from their healthy siblings.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Loss of Social Behaviours in Populations of Pseudomonas aeruginosa Infecting Lungs of Patients with Cystic Fibrosis

Natalie Jiricny; Søren Molin; Kevin R. Foster; Stephen P. Diggle; Pauline D. Scanlan; Melanie Ghoul; Helle Krogh Johansen; Lorenzo A. Santorelli; Roman Popat; Stuart A. West; Ashleigh S. Griffin

Pseudomonas aeruginosa, is an opportunistic, bacterial pathogen causing persistent and frequently fatal infections of the lung in patients with cystic fibrosis. Isolates from chronic infections differ from laboratory and environmental strains in a range of traits and this is widely interpreted as the result of adaptation to the lung environment. Typically, chronic strains carry mutations in global regulation factors that could effect reduced expression of social traits, raising the possibility that competitive dynamics between cooperative and selfish, cheating strains could also drive changes in P. aeruginosa infections. We compared the expression of cooperative traits - biofilm formation, secretion of exo-products and quorum sensing (QS) - in P. aeruginosa isolates that were estimated to have spent different lengths of time in the lung based on clinical information. All three exo-products involved in nutrient acquisition were produced in significantly smaller quantities with increased duration of infection, and patterns across four QS signal molecules were consistent with accumulation over time of mutations in lasR, which are known to disrupt the ability of cells to respond to QS signal. Pyocyanin production, and the proportion of cells in biofilm relative to motile, free-living cells in liquid culture, did not change. Overall, our results confirm that the loss of social behaviour is a consistent trend with time spent in the lung and suggest that social dynamics are potentially relevant to understanding the behaviour of P. aeruginosa in lung infections.


Bacteriophage | 2015

Experimental evolution and bacterial resistance: (co)evolutionary costs and trade-offs as opportunities in phage therapy research

Pauline D. Scanlan; Angus Buckling; Alex R. Hall

Antagonistic coevolution between bacteria and phages (reciprocal selection for resistance and infectivity) has been demonstrated in a wide range of natural ecosystems, as well as experimental populations of microbes, yet exploiting knowledge of coevolution for the prophylactic and therapeutic use of phages is under-explored. In this addendum to our recent paper we discuss how real-time coevolution studies using experimental populations of bacteria and phages can provide novel insight into the changes in bacterial phenotypes that result from resistance evolution against coevolving phages, and how this may ultimately improve our understanding of phage therapy and ability to design effective treatments.


Biology Letters | 2016

Adaptation to abiotic conditions drives local adaptation in bacteria and viruses coevolving in heterogeneous environments.

Florien A. Gorter; Pauline D. Scanlan; Angus Buckling

Parasite local adaptation, the greater performance of parasites on their local compared with foreign hosts, has important consequences for the maintenance of diversity and epidemiology. While the abiotic environment may significantly affect local adaptation, most studies to date have failed either to incorporate the effects of the abiotic environment, or to separate them from those of the biotic environment. Here, we tease apart biotic and abiotic components of local adaptation using the bacterium Pseudomonas fluorescens and its viral parasite bacteriophage Φ2. We coevolved replicate populations of bacteria and phages at three different temperatures, and determined their performance against coevolutionary partners from the same and different temperatures. Crucially, we measured performance at different assay temperatures, which allowed us to disentangle adaptation to biotic and abiotic habitat components. Our results show that bacteria and phages are more resistant and infectious, respectively, at the temperature at which they previously coevolved, confirming that local adaptation to abiotic conditions can play a crucial role in determining parasite infectivity and host resistance. Our work underlines the need to assess host–parasite interactions across multiple relevant abiotic environments, and suggests that microbial adaption to local temperatures can create ecological barriers to dispersal across temperature gradients.


Journal of Evolutionary Biology | 2013

No effect of host–parasite co-evolution on host range expansion

Pauline D. Scanlan; Alex R. Hall; P. Burlinson; Gail M. Preston; Angus Buckling

Antagonistic co‐evolution between hosts and parasites (reciprocal selection for resistance and infectivity) is hypothesized to play an important role in host range expansion by selecting for novel infectivity alleles, but tests are lacking. Here, we determine whether experimental co‐evolution between a bacterium (Pseudomonas fluorescens SBW25) and a phage (SBW25Φ2) affects interstrain host range: the ability to infect different strains of P. fluorescens other than SBW25. We identified and tested a genetically and phenotypically diverse suite of co‐evolved phage variants of SBW25Φ2 against both sympatric and allopatric co‐evolving hosts (P. fluorescens SBW25) and a large set of other P. fluorescens strains. Although all co‐evolved phage had a greater host range than the ancestral phage and could differentially infect co‐evolved variants of P. fluorescens SBW25, none could infect any of the alternative P. fluorescens strains. Thus, parasite generalism at one genetic scale does not appear to affect generalism at other scales, suggesting fundamental genetic constraints on parasite adaptation for this virus.

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Freya Harrison

University of Nottingham

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Weidong Kong

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Susan V. Lynch

University of California

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Yvette K. Wild

University of California

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