School of Biological Sciences, University of Reading, Reading, UK.
Int J Parasitol. 2009 Jul 15;39(9):1003-10. doi: 10.1016/j.ijpara.2009.01.007.
The myxozoan, Tetracapsuloides bryosalmonae, exploits freshwater bryozoans as definitive hosts, occurring as cryptic stages in bryozoan colonies during covert infections and as spore-forming sacs during overt infections. Spores released from sacs are infective to salmonid fish, causing the devastating Proliferative Kidney Disease (PKD). We undertook laboratory studies using mesocosm systems running at 10, 14 and 20 degrees C to determine how infection by T. bryosalmonae and water temperature influence fitness of one of its most important bryozoan hosts, Fredericella sultana, over a period of 4 weeks. The effects of infection were context-dependent and often undetectable. Covert infections appear to pose very low energetic costs. Thus, we found that growth of covertly infected F. sultana colonies was similar to that of uninfected colonies regardless of temperature, as was the propensity to produce dormant resting stages (statoblasts). Production of statoblasts, however, was associated with decreased growth. Overt infections imposed greater effects on correlates of host fitness by: (i) reducing growth rates at the two higher temperatures; (ii) increasing mortality rates at the highest temperature; (iii) inhibiting statoblast production. Our results indicate that parasitism should have a relatively small effect on host fitness in the field as the negative effects of infection were mainly expressed in environmentally extreme conditions (20 degrees C for 4 weeks). The generally low virulence of T. bryosalmonae is similar to that recently demonstrated for another myxozoan endoparasite of freshwater bryozoans. The unique opportunity for extensive vertical transmission in these colonial invertebrate hosts couples the reproductive interests of host and parasite and may well give rise to the low virulence that characterises these systems. Our study implies that climate change can be expected to exacerbate PKD outbreaks and increase the geographic range of PKD as a result of the combined responses of T. bryosalmonae and its bryozoan hosts to higher temperatures.
粘孢子虫 Tetracapsuloides bryosalmonae 利用淡水苔藓动物作为终末宿主,在隐蔽感染期间作为苔藓动物群体中的隐匿阶段存在,在显性感染期间作为孢子形成囊存在。从囊中释放的孢子对鲑鱼具有感染力,导致破坏性的增殖性肾病(PKD)。我们进行了实验室研究,使用在 10、14 和 20°C 下运行的中观系统,以确定 T. bryosalmonae 的感染和水温如何在 4 周内影响其最重要的苔藓动物宿主之一 Fredericella sultana 的适应性。感染的影响取决于背景,并且通常难以察觉。隐蔽感染似乎不会带来很高的能量成本。因此,我们发现,无论温度如何,隐蔽感染的 F. sultana 群体的生长与未感染的群体相似,产生休眠静止阶段(statoblasts)的倾向也是如此。然而,statoblasts 的产生与生长减少有关。显性感染通过以下方式对宿主适应性的相关指标产生更大的影响:(i)在两个较高温度下降低生长率;(ii)在最高温度下增加死亡率;(iii)抑制 statoblast 的产生。我们的结果表明,寄生对宿主适应性的影响相对较小,因为感染的负面影响主要在环境极端条件下(20°C 持续 4 周)表现出来。T. bryosalmonae 的一般低毒力与最近对另一种淡水苔藓动物内生寄生虫的研究结果相似。在这些殖民地无脊椎动物宿主中广泛垂直传播的独特机会将宿主和寄生虫的生殖利益联系在一起,这很可能导致这些系统的低毒力特征。我们的研究表明,气候变化可能会加剧 PKD 的爆发,并由于 T. bryosalmonae 及其苔藓动物宿主对较高温度的综合反应,导致 PKD 的地理范围扩大。