Department of Biology, Lund University, Ecology Building, 223 62 Lund, Sweden. Infectious Disease Unit, Department of Medicine Solna, Karolinska Institute, 17176 Stockholm, Sweden.
Department of Biology, Lund University, Ecology Building, 223 62 Lund, Sweden.
Science. 2015 Jan 23;347(6220):436-8. doi: 10.1126/science.1261121.
Recovery from infection is not always complete, and mild chronic infection may persist. Although the direct costs of such infections are apparently small, the potential for any long-term effects on Darwinian fitness is poorly understood. In a wild population of great reed warblers, we found that low-level chronic malaria infection reduced life span as well as the lifetime number and quality of offspring. These delayed fitness effects of malaria appear to be mediated by telomere degradation, a result supported by controlled infection experiments on birds in captivity. The results of this study imply that chronic infection may be causing a series of small adverse effects that accumulate and eventually impair phenotypic quality and Darwinian fitness.
从感染中恢复并不总是完全的,轻度慢性感染可能持续存在。虽然此类感染的直接成本显然较小,但对其对达尔文适应度的潜在长期影响还了解甚少。在大苇莺的野生种群中,我们发现低水平的慢性疟疾感染会降低寿命以及终生后代的数量和质量。这些疟疾的延迟适应度效应似乎是由端粒降解介导的,这一结果得到了在圈养鸟类中进行的受控感染实验的支持。这项研究的结果表明,慢性感染可能导致一系列小的不利影响积累,并最终损害表型质量和达尔文适应度。