Biosciences, College of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Exeter, Penryn, Cornwall, UK.
Ecol Lett. 2012 Oct;15(10):1104-11. doi: 10.1111/j.1461-0248.2012.01832.x. Epub 2012 Aug 1.
Variation for resistance to infectious disease is ubiquitous and critical to host and parasite evolution and to disease impact, spread and control. However, the processes that generate and maintain this diversity are not understood. We examine how ecological feedbacks generate diversity in host defence focussing on when polymorphism can evolve without co-evolution of the parasite. Our key result is that when there is heritable variation in hosts in both their transmissibility and susceptibility along with costs to resistance, there is the possibility of the evolution of polymorphism. We argue that a wide range of behavioural or physiological mechanisms may lead to relationships between transmissibility and susceptibility that generate diversity. We illustrate this by showing that a tendency for higher contacts between related individuals leads to polymorphism. Only dimorphisms can evolve when infection is determined only by an individuals' susceptibility or when transmissibility and susceptibility are simply positively or negatively correlated.
疾病抗性的变异是普遍存在的,对宿主和寄生虫的进化以及疾病的影响、传播和控制至关重要。然而,产生和维持这种多样性的过程尚不清楚。我们研究了生态反馈如何产生宿主防御的多样性,重点关注在寄生虫没有共同进化的情况下,多态性是如何进化的。我们的主要结果是,当宿主在其传染性和易感性方面具有可遗传性的变异,并且对抵抗力有成本时,就有可能进化出多态性。我们认为,广泛的行为或生理机制可能导致传染性和易感性之间的关系产生多样性。我们通过表明,在相关个体之间的接触倾向更高的情况下,会导致多态性的出现,来说明这一点。只有当感染仅由个体的易感性决定,或者当传染性和易感性简单地呈正相关或负相关时,二态性才能进化。