Hurd Hilary
Centre for Applied Entomology and Parasitology, School of Life Sciences, Keele University, Keele, Staffordshire ST5 5BG, United Kingdom.
Annu Rev Entomol. 2003;48:141-61. doi: 10.1146/annurev.ento.48.091801.112722. Epub 2002 Jun 4.
Many of the most harmful parasitic diseases are transmitted by blood-feeding insect vectors. During this stage of their life cycles, selection pressures favor parasites that can manipulate their vectors to enhance transmission. Strategies may include increasing the amount of contact between vector and host, reducing vector reproductive output and consequently altering vector resource management to increase available nutrient reserves, and increasing vector longevity. Manipulation of these life-history traits may be more beneficial at some phase of the parasite's developmental process than at others. This review examines empirical, experimental, and field-based evidence to evaluate examples of changes in vector behavior and physiology that might be construed to be manipulative. Examples are mainly drawn from malaria-infected mosquitoes, Leishmania-infected sandflies, and Trypanosoma-infected tsetse flies.
许多最有害的寄生虫病是由吸食血液的昆虫媒介传播的。在其生命周期的这个阶段,选择压力有利于那些能够操纵其媒介以增强传播的寄生虫。策略可能包括增加媒介与宿主之间的接触量,降低媒介的繁殖产出,从而改变媒介的资源管理以增加可用的营养储备,以及延长媒介的寿命。在寄生虫发育过程的某些阶段,对这些生活史特征的操纵可能比在其他阶段更有益。本综述研究了基于实证、实验和实地的证据,以评估可能被认为具有操纵性的媒介行为和生理变化的实例。实例主要来自感染疟疾的蚊子、感染利什曼原虫的白蛉以及感染锥虫的采采蝇。