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疟原虫墨西哥疟原虫在其自由放养的蜥蜴宿主自然感染中的克隆多样性动态。

Dynamics of clonal diversity in natural infections of the malaria parasite Plasmodium mexicanum in its free-ranging lizard host.

作者信息

Hicks Nathan D, Schall Jos J

机构信息

Department of Biology, University of Vermont, Burlington, VT, 05405, USA.

出版信息

Parasitol Res. 2014 Jun;113(6):2059-67. doi: 10.1007/s00436-014-3854-4. Epub 2014 Mar 20.

Abstract

Within mixed-genotype infections of malaria parasites (Plasmodium), the number of genetic clones present is associated with variation in important life history traits of the infection, including virulence. Although the number of clones present is important, how the proportion of those clones varies over time is poorly known. Clonal proportions of the lizard malaria parasite, Plasmodium mexicanum, were assessed in naturally infected free-ranging lizards followed in a mark-recapture program over as long as two warm seasons, the typical life span of the lizard. Clonal proportions were determined by amplifying two microsatellite markers, a method previously verified for accuracy. Most blood samples had been stored for over a decade, so a verification test determined that these samples had not degraded. Although the environment experienced by the parasite (its host) varies over the seasons and transmission occurs over the entire warm season, 68% of infections were stable over time, harboring a single clone (37% of infections) or multiple clones changing only 1-12% maximum comparing any two samples (31% of infections). The maximum change seen in any infection (comparing any two sample periods) was only 30%. A new clone entered three infections (only once successfully), and a clone was lost in only three infections. These results mirror those seen for a previous study of experimentally induced infections that showed little change in relative proportions over time. The results of this study, the first look at how clonal proportions vary over time for any malaria parasite of a nonhuman vertebrate host for natural infections, were surprising because experimental studies show clones of P. mexicanum appear to interact, yet relative proportions of clones typically remain constant over time.

摘要

在疟原虫(疟原虫属)的混合基因型感染中,存在的基因克隆数量与感染的重要生活史特征(包括毒力)的变化有关。虽然存在的克隆数量很重要,但这些克隆的比例随时间如何变化却鲜为人知。在一个标记重捕项目中,对自然感染的自由放养蜥蜴体内的墨西哥疟原虫的克隆比例进行了评估,该项目持续了长达两个温暖季节,这是蜥蜴的典型寿命。通过扩增两个微卫星标记来确定克隆比例,该方法先前已验证其准确性。大多数血样已保存了十多年,因此通过验证测试确定这些样本没有降解。尽管寄生虫(其宿主)所处的环境随季节变化,且传播发生在整个温暖季节,但68%的感染随时间保持稳定,要么携带单个克隆(占感染的37%),要么多个克隆在比较任意两个样本时最大变化仅为1 - 12%(占感染的31%)。在任何感染中观察到的最大变化(比较任意两个采样期)仅为30%。一个新克隆进入了三次感染(只有一次成功),并且只有三次感染中出现了克隆丢失的情况。这些结果与之前一项关于实验诱导感染的研究结果相似,该研究表明随着时间推移相对比例变化很小。这项研究的结果是首次观察非人类脊椎动物宿主的任何疟原虫自然感染中克隆比例随时间如何变化,令人惊讶的是,实验研究表明墨西哥疟原虫的克隆似乎会相互作用,但克隆的相对比例通常随时间保持恒定。

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