Rynkiewicz Evelyn C, Brown Julia, Tufts Danielle M, Huang Ching-I, Kampen Helge, Bent Stephen J, Fish Durland, Diuk-Wasser Maria A
Ecology, Evolution, and Environmental Biology Department, Columbia University, 1200 Amsterdam Ave, New York, NY, 10027, USA.
Yale School of Public Health, 60 College St, New Haven, CT, 06510, USA.
Parasit Vectors. 2017 Feb 6;10(1):64. doi: 10.1186/s13071-016-1964-9.
Wild hosts are commonly co-infected with complex, genetically diverse, pathogen communities. Competition is expected between genetically or ecologically similar pathogen strains which may influence patterns of coexistence. However, there is little data on how specific strains of these diverse pathogen species interact within the host and how this impacts pathogen persistence in nature. Ticks are the most common disease vector in temperate regions with Borrelia burgdorferi, the causative agent of Lyme disease, being the most common vector-borne pathogen in North America. Borrelia burgdorferi is a pathogen of high public health concern and there is significant variation in infection phenotype between strains, which influences predictions of pathogen dynamics and spread.
In a laboratory experiment, we investigated whether two closely-related strains of B. burgdorferi (sensu stricto) showed similar transmission phenotypes, how the transmission of these strains changed when a host was infected with one strain, re-infected with the same strain, or co-infected with two strains. Ixodes scapularis, the black-legged tick, nymphs were used to sequentially infect laboratory-bred Peromyscus leucopus, white-footed mice, with one strain only, homologous infection with the same stain, or heterologous infection with both strains. We used the results of this laboratory experiment to simulate long-term persistence and maintenance of each strain in a simple simulation model.
Strain LG734 was more competitive than BL206, showing no difference in transmission between the heterologous infection groups and single-infection controls, while strain BL206 transmission was significantly reduced when strain LG734 infected first. The results of the model show that this asymmetry in competition could lead to extinction of strain BL206 unless there was a tick-to-host transmission advantage to this less competitive strain.
This asymmetric competitive interaction suggests that strain identity and the biotic context of co-infection is important to predict strain dynamics and persistence.
野生宿主通常会被复杂的、基因多样的病原体群落共同感染。预计基因或生态相似的病原体菌株之间会存在竞争,这可能会影响共存模式。然而,关于这些不同病原体物种的特定菌株在宿主体内如何相互作用以及这如何影响病原体在自然界中的持久性的数据很少。蜱是温带地区最常见的疾病传播媒介,莱姆病的病原体伯氏疏螺旋体是北美最常见的媒介传播病原体。伯氏疏螺旋体是一种备受公众健康关注的病原体,不同菌株之间的感染表型存在显著差异,这会影响对病原体动态和传播的预测。
在一项实验室实验中,我们研究了两种密切相关的伯氏疏螺旋体(狭义)菌株是否表现出相似的传播表型,当宿主被一种菌株感染、再次被同一菌株感染或被两种菌株共同感染时,这些菌株的传播会如何变化。用黑脚蜱若虫依次感染实验室饲养的白足鼠,分别只感染一种菌株(同源感染同一菌株)或同时感染两种菌株(异源感染)。我们利用该实验室实验的结果,在一个简单的模拟模型中模拟每种菌株的长期持久性和维持情况。
LG734菌株比BL206菌株更具竞争力,异源感染组和单感染对照组之间的传播没有差异,而当LG734菌株先感染时,BL206菌株的传播显著减少。模型结果表明,这种竞争中的不对称性可能导致BL206菌株灭绝,除非这种竞争力较弱的菌株在蜱到宿主的传播方面具有优势。
这种不对称的竞争相互作用表明,菌株身份和共同感染的生物背景对于预测菌株动态和持久性很重要。