Gardner Andy, West Stuart A, Buckling Angus
Institute of Cell, Animal and Population Biology, University of Edinburgh, King's Buildings, West Mains Road, Edinburgh EH9 3JT, UK.
Proc Biol Sci. 2004 Jul 22;271(1547):1529-35. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2004.2756.
There has been much interest in using social evolution theory to predict the damage to a host from parasite infection, termed parasite virulence. Most of this work has focused on how high kinship between the parasites infecting a host can select for more prudent exploitation of the host, leading to a negative relationship between virulence and parasite kinship. However, it has also been shown that if parasites can cooperate to overcome the host, then high parasite kinship within hosts can select for greater cooperation and higher growth rates, hence leading to a positive relationship between virulence and parasite kinship. We examine the impact of a spiteful behaviour, chemical (bacteriocin) warfare between microbes, on the evolution of virulence, and find a new relationship: virulence is maximized when the frequency of kin among parasites' social partners is low or high, and is minimized at intermediate values. This emphasizes how biological details can fundamentally alter the qualitative nature of theoretical predictions made by models of parasite virulence.
利用社会进化理论来预测寄生虫感染对宿主造成的损害(即所谓的寄生虫毒力),这一做法已引发了诸多关注。这项工作大多聚焦于感染宿主的寄生虫之间的高度亲缘关系如何促使其对宿主进行更为审慎的利用,进而导致毒力与寄生虫亲缘关系之间呈现负相关。然而,研究也表明,如果寄生虫能够合作以战胜宿主,那么宿主体内较高的寄生虫亲缘关系会促使其进行更大程度的合作以及实现更高的生长速率,从而导致毒力与寄生虫亲缘关系之间呈现正相关。我们研究了一种恶意行为,即微生物之间的化学(细菌素)战,对毒力进化的影响,并发现了一种新的关系:当寄生虫社会伙伴中的亲缘频率较低或较高时,毒力会最大化,而在中间值时毒力会最小化。这凸显了生物学细节如何能从根本上改变寄生虫毒力模型所做理论预测的定性性质。