Godkin Andrew, Smith Katherine A
Division of Infection and Immunity, Cardiff University, Cardiff, Glamorgan, UK.
Immunology. 2017 Apr;150(4):389-396. doi: 10.1111/imm.12703. Epub 2017 Jan 19.
Eukaryotic forms of life have been continually invaded by microbes and larger multicellular parasites, such as helminths. Over a billion years ago bacterial endosymbionts permanently colonized eukaryotic cells leading to recognized organelles with a distinct genetic lineage, such as mitochondria and chloroplasts. Colonization of our skin and mucosal surfaces with bacterial commensals is now known to be important for host health. However, the contribution of chronic virus and parasitic infections to immune homeostasis is being increasingly questioned. Persistent infection does not necessarily equate to exhibiting a chronic illness: healthy hosts (e.g. humans) have chronic viral and parasitic infections with no evidence of disease. Indeed, there are now examples of complex interactions between these microbes and hosts that seem to confer an advantage to the host at a particular time, suggesting that the relationship has progressed along an axis from parasitic to commensal to one of a mutualistic symbiosis. This concept is explored using examples from viruses and parasites, considering how the relationships may be not only detrimental but also beneficial to the human host.
真核生物形式的生命不断受到微生物以及较大的多细胞寄生虫(如蠕虫)的侵袭。超过十亿年前,细菌内共生体永久定殖于真核细胞,形成了具有独特遗传谱系的公认细胞器,如线粒体和叶绿体。如今已知,皮肤和粘膜表面被细菌共生菌定殖对宿主健康很重要。然而,慢性病毒和寄生虫感染对免疫稳态的作用正日益受到质疑。持续感染并不一定等同于表现出慢性疾病:健康宿主(如人类)存在慢性病毒和寄生虫感染,但无疾病迹象。事实上,现在有这些微生物与宿主之间复杂相互作用的例子,这些相互作用似乎在特定时间对宿主有利,这表明这种关系已沿着从寄生到共生再到互利共生的轴线发展。本文通过病毒和寄生虫的例子探讨这一概念,思考这些关系如何不仅对人类宿主有害,而且有益。