Cattadori I M, Boag B, Hudson P J
Division of Animal Production and Public Health, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, The University of Glasgow, Glasgow G61 1QH, UK.
Int J Parasitol. 2008 Mar;38(3-4):371-80. doi: 10.1016/j.ijpara.2007.08.004. Epub 2007 Sep 12.
We examined the hypothesis that the interaction between concomitant infecting parasites modifies host susceptibility, parasite intensity and the pattern of parasite distribution within the host population. We used a 26 year time series of three common parasites in a natural population of rabbits: two gastrointestinal nematodes (Trichostrongylus retortaeformis and Graphidium strigosum) and the immunosuppressive myxoma virus. The frequency distribution of nematodes in the host population and the relationship between host age and nematode intensity were explored in rabbits with either single or dual nematode infections and rabbits infected with the nematodes and myxoma virus. The aggregation of T. retortaeformis and G. strigosum among the rabbits varied with the nature of the co-infection both in male and female hosts. The two nematodes exhibited different age-intensity profiles: G. strigosum intensity increased exponentially with host age while T. retortaeformis intensity exhibited a convex shape. The presence of a secondary infection did not change the age-intensity profile for G. strigosum but for T. retortaeformis co-infection (either both nematodes or myxoma-nematodes) resulted in significantly greater intensities in adult hosts. Results suggest that multi-species infections contributed to aggregation of parasites in the host population and to seasonal variation in intensity, but also enhanced differences in parasitism between sexes. This effect was apparent for T. retortaeformis, which appears to elicit a strong acquired immune response but not for G. strigosum which does not produce any evident immune reaction. We concluded that concomitant infections mediated by host immunity are important in modifying host susceptibility and influencing heterogeneity amongst individual hosts.
同时感染的寄生虫之间的相互作用会改变宿主易感性、寄生虫强度以及宿主群体内寄生虫的分布模式。我们利用了一个26年的时间序列,该序列来自于自然兔群中三种常见的寄生虫:两种胃肠道线虫(捻转血矛线虫和粗纹艾美球虫)以及具有免疫抑制作用的黏液瘤病毒。在感染单一或双重线虫的兔子以及感染线虫和黏液瘤病毒的兔子中,探究了宿主群体中线虫的频率分布以及宿主年龄与线虫强度之间的关系。在雄性和雌性宿主中,捻转血矛线虫和粗纹艾美球虫在兔子中的聚集情况会因共同感染的性质而有所不同。这两种线虫呈现出不同的年龄-强度分布:粗纹艾美球虫的强度随宿主年龄呈指数增长,而捻转血矛线虫的强度则呈凸形。二次感染的存在并未改变粗纹艾美球虫的年龄-强度分布,但对于捻转血矛线虫而言,共同感染(线虫-线虫或黏液瘤-线虫)会导致成年宿主中的强度显著更高。结果表明,多物种感染导致了宿主群体中寄生虫的聚集以及强度的季节性变化,但同时也加剧了性别之间寄生虫感染的差异。这种效应在捻转血矛线虫中很明显,它似乎会引发强烈的获得性免疫反应,而粗纹艾美球虫则不会,它不会产生任何明显的免疫反应。我们得出结论,由宿主免疫介导的同时感染在改变宿主易感性和影响个体宿主之间的异质性方面很重要。