Kaushik M, Knowles S C L, Webster J P
Department of Infectious Disease Epidemiology, School of Public Health, Imperial College Faculty of Medicine, St Mary's Campus, London W2 1PG, UK.
Department of Infectious Disease Epidemiology, School of Public Health, Imperial College Faculty of Medicine, St Mary's Campus, London W2 1PG, UK
Integr Comp Biol. 2014 Jul;54(2):118-28. doi: 10.1093/icb/icu060. Epub 2014 Jun 6.
Toxoplasma gondii is an indirectly transmitted protozoan parasite, of which members of the cat family (Felidae) are the only definitive hosts and small mammals such as rats serve as intermediate hosts. The innate aversion of rodents to cat odor provides an obstacle for the parasite against successful predation by the feline definitive host. Previous research has demonstrated that T. gondii appears to alter a rat's perception of the risk of being preyed upon by cats. Although uninfected rats display normal aversion to cat odor, infected rats show no avoidance and in some cases even show attraction to cat odor, which we originally termed the "Fatal Feline Attraction." In this study, we tested for the first time whether the "Fatal Feline Attraction" of T. gondii-infected rats differed according to the type of feline odor used, specifically whether it came from domestic cats (Felis silvestris catus) or wild cats-cheetahs (Acinonyx jubatus) or pumas (Felis concolor). In two-choice odor trials, where wild and domestic cat odors were competed against one another, consistent with previous findings we demonstrated that infected rats spent more time in feline odor zones compared with uninfected rats. However, we further demonstrated that all cat odors are not equal: infected rats had a stronger preference for wild cat odor over that of domestic cats, an effect that did not differ significantly according to the type of wild cat odor used (cheetah or puma). We discuss these results in terms of the potential mechanism of action and their implications for the current and evolutionary role of wild, in addition to domestic, cats in transmission of T. gondii.
刚地弓形虫是一种间接传播的原生动物寄生虫,猫科动物是其唯一的终末宿主,而大鼠等小型哺乳动物则作为中间宿主。啮齿动物对猫气味的先天厌恶为该寄生虫成功被猫科终末宿主捕食提供了障碍。先前的研究表明,刚地弓形虫似乎会改变大鼠对被猫捕食风险的认知。虽然未感染的大鼠对猫气味表现出正常的厌恶,但感染的大鼠却没有回避,在某些情况下甚至表现出对猫气味的吸引,我们最初将其称为“致命的猫科动物吸引力”。在本研究中,我们首次测试了刚地弓形虫感染大鼠的“致命的猫科动物吸引力”是否因所用猫气味的类型而异,具体来说,它是来自家猫(Felis silvestris catus)还是野猫——猎豹(Acinonyx jubatus)或美洲狮(Felis concolor)。在野生和家猫气味相互竞争的二选一气味试验中,与先前的研究结果一致,我们发现感染的大鼠与未感染的大鼠相比,在猫气味区域停留的时间更长。然而,我们进一步证明,并非所有的猫气味都是一样的:感染的大鼠对野猫气味的偏好强于家猫气味,并且根据所用野猫气味的类型(猎豹或美洲狮),这种效应没有显著差异。我们从潜在作用机制以及野生猫和家猫在刚地弓形虫传播中的当前和进化作用的角度讨论了这些结果。