Long Gráinne H, Chan Brian H K, Allen Judith E, Read Andrew F, Graham Andrea L
Institutes of Evolution, Immunology and Infection Research, School of Biological Sciences, University of Edinburgh, King's Buildings, West Mains Road, Edinburgh, EH9 3JT, UK.
BMC Evol Biol. 2008 Apr 30;8:128. doi: 10.1186/1471-2148-8-128.
Explaining parasite virulence (harm to the host) represents a major challenge for evolutionary and biomedical scientists alike. Most theoretical models of virulence evolution assume that virulence arises as a direct consequence of host exploitation, the process whereby parasites convert host resources into transmission opportunities. However, infection-induced disease can be immune-mediated (immunopathology). Little is known about how immunopathology affects parasite fitness, or how it will affect the evolution of parasite virulence. Here we studied the effects of immunopathology on infection-induced host mortality rate and lifetime transmission potential - key components of parasite fitness - using the rodent malaria model, Plasmodium chabaudi chabaudi.
Neutralizing interleukin [IL]-10, an important regulator of inflammation, allowed us to experimentally increase the proportion of virulence due to immunopathology for eight parasite clones. In vivo blockade of the IL-10 receptor (IL-10R) with a neutralizing antibody resulted in a shorter time to death that was independent of parasite density and was particularly marked for normally avirulent clones. This suggests that IL-10 induction may provide a pathway to avirulence for P. c. chabaudi. Despite the increased investment in transmission-stage parasites observed for some clones in response to IL-10R blockade, experimental enhancement of immunopathology incurred a uniform fitness cost to all parasite clones by reducing lifetime transmission potential.
This is the first experimental study to demonstrate that infection-induced immunopathology and parasite genetic variability may together have the potential to shape virulence evolution. In accord with recent theory, the data show that some forms of immunopathology may select for parasites that make hosts less sick.
解释寄生虫毒力(对宿主的伤害)对进化生物学家和生物医学科学家来说都是一项重大挑战。大多数毒力进化的理论模型都假定毒力是宿主利用的直接结果,即寄生虫将宿主资源转化为传播机会的过程。然而,感染引发的疾病可能是免疫介导的(免疫病理学)。关于免疫病理学如何影响寄生虫适应性,或者它将如何影响寄生虫毒力的进化,人们知之甚少。在这里,我们使用啮齿动物疟疾模型——查巴迪疟原虫(Plasmodium chabaudi chabaudi),研究了免疫病理学对感染诱导的宿主死亡率和终生传播潜力(寄生虫适应性的关键组成部分)的影响。
中和白细胞介素[IL]-10(一种重要的炎症调节因子)使我们能够通过实验增加八个寄生虫克隆因免疫病理学导致的毒力比例。用中和抗体在体内阻断IL-10受体(IL-10R)会导致死亡时间缩短,这与寄生虫密度无关,对于通常无毒力的克隆尤为明显。这表明IL-10的诱导可能为查巴迪疟原虫提供了一条无毒力的途径。尽管观察到一些克隆对IL-10R阻断的反应是增加了对传播阶段寄生虫的投入,但免疫病理学的实验增强通过降低终生传播潜力,给所有寄生虫克隆带来了一致的适应性代价。
这是第一项实验研究,证明感染诱导的免疫病理学和寄生虫遗传变异性可能共同塑造毒力进化。与最近的理论一致,数据表明某些形式的免疫病理学可能会选择使宿主病情较轻的寄生虫。