Altered within- and between-host transmission under coinfection underpin parasite co-occurrence patterns in the wild.

IF 1.8 3区 环境科学与生态学 Q3 ECOLOGY Evolutionary Ecology Pub Date : 2023-01-01 DOI:10.1007/s10682-022-10182-9
Suvi Sallinen, Hanna Susi, Fletcher Halliday, Anna-Liisa Laine
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

Interactions among parasite species coinfecting the same host individual can have far reaching consequences for parasite ecology and evolution. How these within-host interactions affect epidemics may depend on two non-exclusive mechanisms: parasite growth and reproduction within hosts, and parasite transmission between hosts. Yet, how these two mechanisms operate under coinfection, and how sensitive they are to the composition of the coinfecting parasite community, remains poorly understood. Here, we test the hypothesis that the relationship between within- and between-host transmission of the fungal pathogen, Phomopsis subordinaria, is affected by co-occurring parasites infecting the host plant, Plantago lanceolata. We conducted a field experiment manipulating the parasite community of transmission source plants, then tracked P. subordinaria within-host transmission, as well as between-host transmission to naïve recipient plants. We find that coinfection with the powdery mildew pathogen, Podosphaera plantaginis, causes increased between-host transmission of P. subordinaria by affecting the number of infected flower stalks in the source plants, resulting from altered auto-infection. In contrast, coinfection with viruses did not have an effect on either within- or between-host transmission. We then analyzed data on the occurrence of P. subordinaria in 2018 and the powdery mildew in a multi-year survey data set from natural host populations to test whether the positive association predicted by our experimental results is evident in field epidemiological data. Consistent with our experimental findings, we observed a positive association in the occurrence of P. subordinaria and historical powdery mildew persistence. Jointly, our experimental and epidemiological results suggest that within- and between-host transmission of P. subordinaria depends on the identity of coinfecting parasites, with potentially far-reaching effects on disease dynamics and parasite co-occurrence patterns in wild populations.

Supplementary information: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s10682-022-10182-9.

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在共同感染下,宿主内和宿主间传播的改变巩固了野生寄生虫共现模式。
共同感染同一寄主个体的寄生虫物种之间的相互作用对寄生虫生态学和进化具有深远的影响。这些宿主内相互作用如何影响流行病可能取决于两种非排他性机制:寄生虫在宿主内的生长和繁殖,以及寄生虫在宿主之间的传播。然而,这两种机制在共同感染下如何运作,以及它们对共同感染寄生虫群落的组成有多敏感,仍然知之甚少。在这里,我们验证了真菌病原体Phomopsis subaria在宿主内和宿主间传播的关系受到寄生在宿主植物车前草(Plantago lanceolata)上的寄生虫的影响。本研究通过田间实验对传播源植物的寄生群落进行了控制,并追踪了次叶假单胞菌在寄主内的传播,以及在寄主间对naïve受体植物的传播。我们发现,与车前草(Podosphaera plantaginis)共侵染后,由于自身侵染的改变,通过影响源植物中被侵染花茎的数量,导致次叶假单胞菌在宿主间的传播增加。相比之下,与病毒的共同感染对宿主内或宿主间的传播都没有影响。然后,我们分析了来自自然宿主种群的多年调查数据集中的2018年次级假单抗和白粉病的发生数据,以测试我们的实验结果预测的正相关性是否在现场流行病学数据中明显。与我们的实验结果一致,我们观察到从属假单孢菌的发生与历史白粉病的持久性呈正相关。我们的实验和流行病学结果共同表明,从属疟原虫在宿主内和宿主间的传播取决于共感染寄生虫的身份,对野生种群的疾病动力学和寄生虫共发生模式具有潜在的深远影响。补充信息:在线版本包含补充资料,提供地址为10.1007/s10682-022-10182-9。
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来源期刊
Evolutionary Ecology
Evolutionary Ecology 环境科学-进化生物学
CiteScore
3.00
自引率
5.30%
发文量
70
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: Evolutionary Ecology is a concept-oriented journal of biological research at the interface of ecology and evolution. We publish papers that therefore integrate both fields of research: research that seeks to explain the ecology of organisms in the context of evolution, or patterns of evolution as explained by ecological processes. The journal publishes original research and discussion concerning the evolutionary ecology of organisms. These may include papers addressing evolutionary aspects of population ecology, organismal interactions and coevolution, behaviour, life histories, communication, morphology, host-parasite interactions and disease ecology, as well as ecological aspects of genetic processes. The objective is to promote the conceptual, theoretical and empirical development of ecology and evolutionary biology; the scope extends to any organism or system. In additional to Original Research articles, we publish Review articles that survey recent developments in the field of evolutionary ecology; Ideas & Perspectives articles which present new points of view and novel hypotheses; and Comments on articles recently published in Evolutionary Ecology or elsewhere. We also welcome New Tests of Existing Ideas - testing well-established hypotheses but with broader data or more methodologically rigorous approaches; - and shorter Natural History Notes, which aim to present new observations of organismal biology in the wild that may provide inspiration for future research. As of 2018, we now also invite Methods papers, to present or review new theoretical, practical or analytical methods used in evolutionary ecology. Students & Early Career Researchers: We particularly encourage, and offer incentives for, submission of Reviews, Ideas & Perspectives, and Methods papers by students and early-career researchers (defined as being within one year of award of a PhD degree) – see Students & Early Career Researchers
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