Gómez-Díaz Elena, Doherty Paul F, Duneau David, McCoy Karen D
Génétique et Évolution des Maladies Infectieuses UMR CNRS/IRD 2724, Montpellier, France.
Department of Fish, Wildlife, and Conservation Biology, Colorado State University Fort Collins, CO, USA.
Evol Appl. 2010 Jul;3(4):391-401. doi: 10.1111/j.1752-4571.2010.00127.x. Epub 2010 Apr 9.
Vector organisms are implicated in the transmission of close to a third of all infectious diseases. In many cases, multiple vectors (species or populations) can participate in transmission but may contribute differently to disease ecology and evolution. The presence of cryptic vector populations can be particularly problematic as differences in infection can be difficult to evaluate and may lead to erroneous evolutionary and epidemiological inferences. Here, we combine site-occupancy modeling and molecular assays to evaluate patterns of infection in the marine cycle of Lyme borreliosis, involving colonial seabirds, the tick Ixodes uriae, and bacteria of the Borrelia burgdorferi s.l. complex. In this cycle, the tick vector consists of multiple, cryptic (phenotypically undistinguishable but genetically distinct) host races that are frequently found in sympatry. Our results show that bacterial detection varies strongly among tick races leading to vector-specific biases if raw counts are used to calculate Borrelia prevalence. These differences are largely explained by differences in infection intensity among tick races. After accounting for detection probabilities, we found that overall prevalence in this system is higher than previously suspected and that certain vector-host combinations likely contribute more than others to the local dynamics and large-scale dispersal of Borrelia spirochetes. These results highlight the importance of evaluating vector population structure and accounting for detection probability when trying to understand the evolutionary ecology of vector-borne diseases.
媒介生物与近三分之一的所有传染病传播有关。在许多情况下,多种媒介(物种或种群)可参与传播,但对疾病生态和进化的贡献可能不同。隐性媒介种群的存在可能特别成问题,因为感染差异可能难以评估,并可能导致错误的进化和流行病学推断。在这里,我们结合位点占有率模型和分子检测方法,来评估莱姆病海洋传播循环中的感染模式,该循环涉及群居海鸟、滨海硬蜱以及伯氏疏螺旋体复合群的细菌。在这个循环中,蜱虫媒介由多个隐性(表型上无法区分但基因上不同)宿主种族组成,这些种族经常在同域中被发现。我们的结果表明,如果使用原始计数来计算伯氏疏螺旋体患病率,细菌检测在蜱虫种族之间差异很大,从而导致特定媒介的偏差。这些差异在很大程度上可以由蜱虫种族之间感染强度的差异来解释。在考虑检测概率后,我们发现该系统中的总体患病率高于先前的推测,并且某些媒介-宿主组合可能比其他组合对伯氏疏螺旋体的局部动态和大规模传播贡献更大。这些结果凸显了在试图理解媒介传播疾病的进化生态学过程中,评估媒介种群结构和考虑检测概率的重要性。