Portobello Marine Laboratory, Department of Marine Science, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand.
Oecologia. 2011 Nov;167(3):613-21. doi: 10.1007/s00442-011-2014-0. Epub 2011 May 19.
Infection-induced changes in a host's thermal physiology can represent (1) a generalized host response to infection, (2) a pathological side-effect of infection, or (3), provided the parasite's development is temperature-dependent, a subtle case of host manipulation. This study investigates parasite-induced changes in the thermal biology of a first intermediate host infected by two castrating trematodes (genera Maritrema and Philophthalmus) using laboratory experiments and field surveys. The heat tolerance and temperatures selected by the snail, Zeacumantus subcarinatus, displayed alterations upon infection that differed between the two trematodes. Upon heating, snails infected by Maritrema sustained activity for longer durations than uninfected snails, followed by a more rapid recovery, and selected higher temperatures in a thermal gradient. These snails were also relatively abundant in high shore localities in the summer only, corresponding with seasonal elevated microhabitat temperatures. By contrast, Philophthalmus-infected snails fell rapidly into a coma upon heating and did not display altered thermal preferences. The respective heat tolerance of each trematode corresponded with the thermal responses induced in the snail: Maritrema survived exposure to 40°C, while Philophthalmus was less heat tolerant. Although both trematodes infect the same tissues, Philophthalmus leads to a reduction in the host's thermal tolerance, a response consistent with a pathological side effect. By contrast, Maritrema induces heat tolerance in the snail and withstood exposure to high heat. As the developmental rate and infectivity of Maritrema increase with temperature up to 25°C, one adaptive explanation for our findings is that Maritrema manipulates the snail's thermal responses to exploit warm microhabitats.
(1)宿主对感染的普遍反应;(2)感染的病理副作用;或(3)如果寄生虫的发育依赖于温度,那么这是宿主操纵的一个微妙案例。本研究使用实验室实验和实地调查,调查了两种阉割吸虫(Maritrema 和 Philophthalmus 属)感染第一中间宿主后对其热生物学的影响。感染后,蜗牛 Zeacumantus subcarinatus 的耐热性和选择温度发生了变化,这两种吸虫的变化方式不同。加热时,感染了 Maritrema 的蜗牛比未感染的蜗牛能维持更长时间的活动,然后恢复得更快,并在热梯度中选择更高的温度。这些蜗牛在夏季也只在高岸地区相对丰富,与季节性升高的微生境温度相对应。相比之下,感染了 Philophthalmus 的蜗牛在加热时迅速陷入昏迷,并且没有表现出改变的热偏好。每种吸虫的耐热性与在蜗牛中诱导的热反应相对应:Maritrema 能在 40°C 下存活,而 Philophthalmus 的耐热性较差。尽管两种吸虫都感染相同的组织,但 Philophthalmus 导致宿主的耐热性降低,这与病理副作用一致。相比之下,Maritrema 诱导了蜗牛的耐热性,并能承受高温暴露。由于 Maritrema 的发育速度和感染力随温度升高到 25°C 而增加,因此,我们的研究结果的一个适应性解释是,Maritrema 操纵了蜗牛的热反应,以利用温暖的微生境。