Fairbairn J P, Fenton A, Norman R A, Hudson P J
University of Stirling, Scotland.
Parasitology. 2000 Aug;121 ( Pt 2):211-6. doi: 10.1017/s0031182099006216.
Previous studies have indicated that between 60 and 80% of a population of entomopathogenic nematodes do not infect their insect hosts at any one period in time. Two hypotheses explain this behaviour: the first that there is a subpopulation of non-infectious nematodes and the second that the non-infectious group is created by inhibitory cues derived from infected insects. Through an experimental approach with the Galleria mellonella-Steinernema feltiae system we show that both mechanisms operate together. When conditions for infection were optimized, the sum of individual infection behaviours was similar to the number infecting as a population, implying observed infection rates are driven by intrinsic mechanisms. In addition, there was evidence that an infected host released a chemical cue into the environment which inhibited subsequent levels of infection. This degree of inhibition was independent of the number of infecting nematodes. Both these mechanisms are dynamic, so the observed proportion of infectious nematodes depended heavily on the time of exposure. The implications of these findings for both the design of laboratory trials and the use of entomopathogenic nematodes in biological control are discussed.
先前的研究表明,在任何一个时间段,60%至80%的昆虫病原线虫种群都不会感染它们的昆虫宿主。有两种假说可以解释这种行为:第一种是存在一个非感染性线虫亚群,第二种是这个非感染性群体是由受感染昆虫产生的抑制性信号所导致的。通过使用大蜡螟-斯氏线虫系统进行实验,我们发现这两种机制共同起作用。当感染条件得到优化时,个体感染行为的总和与群体感染数量相似,这意味着观察到的感染率是由内在机制驱动的。此外,有证据表明受感染的宿主会向环境中释放一种化学信号,从而抑制后续的感染水平。这种抑制程度与感染线虫的数量无关。这两种机制都是动态的,因此观察到的感染性线虫比例在很大程度上取决于暴露时间。本文讨论了这些发现对实验室试验设计以及昆虫病原线虫在生物防治中的应用的意义。