15.4 C
Byron Shire
April 29, 2024

Frog microbiomes respond well to vaccine for deadly chytrid fungus

Latest News

Housing not industrial precinct say Lismore locals

Locals from Goonellabah and Lindendale have called out the proposed Goonellabah industrial precinct at 1055A Bruxner Hwy and 245 Oliver Ave as being the wrong use of the site. 

Other News

Emergency services on show April 27

Emergency services will be on show in Banner Park, Brunswick Heads on Saturday April 27 from 9am until 2pm.

Connecting people, rivers, and the night sky in Kyogle

The youth of Kyogle were asked what their number one priority was and they said it was ‘is looking after the health of the river and they want to be involved in healing it’.

Wallum ponds

There are currently two proposed developments in the Byron Shire that will endanger, if not locally exterminate, frog species.  Many...

Domestic violence service calls for urgent action to address crisis

Relationships Australia NSW is calling for urgent intervention from the NSW government to address men’s violence against women, following the horrific murder of Molly Ticehurst.

Blockades continue as councillors wave next Wallum certificate through

A second subdivision works certificate for the Wallum estate was signed off by a majority of councillors last week, who again argued that they have no legal standing to further impede an approved development.

Sweet and sour doughnuts

Victoria Cosford ‘It’s probably a good thing I don’t have a sweet tooth,’ says Megan. I’ve called in at the pop-up...

A Boreal Chorus Frog. Photo Samuel Brinker, CC BY NC

Brought to you by Cosmos Magazine and The Echo

Deadly chytrid fungus is killing frogs in huge numbers around the world, and researchers are racing to find solutions.

A US team has been testing a vaccine against the fungus, and has discovered that it can alter frogs’ microbiomes and make them more resilient.

“The microorganisms that make up an animal’s microbiome can often help defend against pathogens, for example by producing beneficial substances or by competing against the pathogens for space or nutrients,” says team lead Associate Professor Gui Becker, a biologist at Penn State University, US.

“But what happens to your microbiome when you get a vaccine, like a COVID vaccine, a flu shot, or a live-attenuated vaccine like the yellow fever vaccine? In this study, we used frogs as a model system to start exploring this question.”

The researchers gave tadpoles non-lethal doses of one of the substances created by chytrid fungus.

Five weeks later, they investigated the tadpoles’ microbiota, to see how they’d changed.

“Increasing the concentration and duration of exposure to the chytrid product prophylaxis significantly shifted the composition of the microbiome so that there was a higher proportion of bacteria producing anti-chytrid substances,” says Samantha Siomko, a masters student who did the research in Becker’s lab at the University of Alabama.

“This protective shift suggests that, if an animal were exposed to the same fungus again, its microbiome would be better capable of fighting the pathogen.”

While the composition and relative amounts of microbes changed post-vaccination, the overall diversity did not.

This is important, because having a less diverse microbiome often leads to frog death.

“Our results are promising because we have essentially manipulated the entire bacterial community in a direction that is more effective against fighting the fungal pathogen without adding a living thing that needs to compete for resources to survive,” says Becker.

The researchers are hoping to learn more about the mechanisms of this microbiome shift, and look at microbiome memory in adult frogs and other animals.

They’re also interested in seeing if different vaccines would have different results.

“It’s possible that vaccines based on mRNA or live cells — like those often used to protect against bacterial or viral infections — may differently affect the microbiome, and we are excited to explore this possibility,” says Becker.

The research is published in Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.


This article was originally published on Cosmos Magazine and was written by Ellen Phiddian. Ellen Phiddian is a science journalist at Cosmos. She has a BSc (Honours) in chemistry and science communication, and an MSc in science communication, both from the Australian National University.


Support The Echo

Keeping the community together and the community voice loud and clear is what The Echo is about. More than ever we need your help to keep this voice alive and thriving in the community.

Like all businesses we are struggling to keep food on the table of all our local and hard working journalists, artists, sales, delivery and drudges who keep the news coming out to you both in the newspaper and online. If you can spare a few dollars a week – or maybe more – we would appreciate all the support you are able to give to keep the voice of independent, local journalism alive.

1 COMMENT

  1. So that’s a procedure known as ‘Inoculation’. Rasputin did the same to himself with arsenic, so when the Bolsheviks tried to assassinate him with it, the poison had no effect. Inoculation is a Naturopathic procedure that has been around for thousands of years.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

A fond farewell to Mungo’s crosswords

This week we sadly publish the last of Mungo MacCallum’s puzzles. Before he died in 2020 Mungo compiled a large archive of crosswords for The Echo.

Tugun tunnel work at Tweed Heads – road diversion

Motorists are advised of changed overnight traffic conditions from Sunday on the Pacific Motorway, Tweed Heads.

Driver charged following Coffs Harbour fatal crash

A driver has been charged following a fatal crash in the Coffs Harbour area yesterday.

Geologist warns groundwater resource is ‘shrinking’

A new book about Australian groundwater, soil and water has been published by geologist Philip John Brown.