Quigley Benjamin J Z, Brown Sam P, Leggett Helen C, Scanlan Pauline D, Buckling Angus
Department of Zoology,University of Oxford,South Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3PS,UK.
School of Biology, Georgia Institute of Technology,311 Ferst Drive, Atlanta, Georgia 30332-0230,USA.
Parasitology. 2018 May;145(6):770-774. doi: 10.1017/S003118201700052X. Epub 2017 May 15.
Competition between parasite species or genotypes can play an important role in the establishment of parasites in new host populations. Here, we investigate a mechanism by which a rare parasite is unable to establish itself in a host population if a common resident parasite is already present (a 'priority effect'). We develop a simple epidemiological model and show that a rare parasite genotype is unable to invade if coinfecting parasite genotypes inhibit each other's transmission more than expected from simple resource partitioning. This is because a rare parasite is more likely to be in multiply-infected hosts than the common genotype, and hence more likely to pay the cost of reduced transmission. Experiments competing interfering clones of bacteriophage infecting a bacterium support the model prediction that the clones are unable to invade each other from rare. We briefly discuss the implications of these results for host-parasite ecology and (co)evolution.
寄生虫物种或基因型之间的竞争在新宿主群体中寄生虫的定殖过程中可能起着重要作用。在此,我们研究了一种机制,即如果已经存在一种常见的常驻寄生虫,那么一种罕见寄生虫就无法在宿主群体中定殖(“优先效应”)。我们构建了一个简单的流行病学模型,并表明,如果共感染的寄生虫基因型对彼此传播的抑制作用超过了简单资源分配所预期的程度,那么一种罕见的寄生虫基因型就无法入侵。这是因为与常见基因型相比,罕见寄生虫更有可能存在于多重感染的宿主中,因此更有可能付出传播减少的代价。用感染一种细菌的噬菌体干扰克隆进行的竞争实验支持了模型预测,即这些克隆无法从罕见状态相互入侵。我们简要讨论了这些结果对宿主 - 寄生虫生态学和(共同)进化的影响。