Taylor Louise H, Mackinnon Margaret J, Read Andrew F
Institute of Cell, Animal and Population Biology, University of Edinburgh, King's Buildings, West Mains Road, Edinburgh, EH9 3JT, Scotland.
Evolution. 1998 Apr;52(2):583-591. doi: 10.1111/j.1558-5646.1998.tb01656.x.
Most evolutionary models treat virulence as an unavoidable consequence of microparasite replication and have predicted that in mixed-genotype infections, natural selection should favor higher levels of virulence than is optimal in genetically uniform infections. Increased virulence may evolve as a genetically fixed strategy, appropriate for the frequency of mixed infections in the population, or may occur as a conditional response to mixed infection, that is, a facultative strategy. Here we test whether facultative alterations in replication rates in the presence of competing genotypes occur and generate greater virulence. An important alternative, not currently incorporated in models of the evolution of virulence, is that host responses mounted against genetically diverse parasites may be more costly or less effective than those against genetically uniform parasites. If so, mixed clone infections will be more virulent for a given parasite replication rate. Two groups of mice were infected with one of two clones of Plasmodium chabaudi parasites, and three groups of mice were infected with 1:9, 5:5, or 9:1 mixtures of the same two clones. Virulence was assessed by monitoring mouse body weight and red blood cell density. Transmission stage densities were significantly higher in mixed- than in single-clone infections. Within treatment groups, transmission stage production increased with the virulence of the infection, a phenotypic correlation consistent with the genetic correlation assumed by much of the theoretical work on the evolution of virulence. Consistent with theoretical predictions of facultative alterations in virulence, we found that mice infected with both parasite clones lost more weight and had on average lower blood counts than those infected with single-clone infections. However, there was no consistent evidence of the mechanism invoked by evolutionary models that predict this effect. Replication rates and parasite densities were not always higher in ∗∗∗mixed-clone infections, and for a given replication rate or parasite density, mixed-clone infections were still more virulent. Instead, prolonged anemia and increased transmission may have occured because genetically diverse infections are less rapidly cleared by hosts. Differences in maximum weight loss occured even when there were comparable parasite densities in mixed- and single-clone infections. We suggest that mounting an immune response against more that one parasite genotype is more costly for hosts, which therefore suffer higher virulence.
大多数进化模型将毒力视为微寄生虫复制不可避免的结果,并预测在混合基因型感染中,自然选择应倾向于比基因同质感染中最优水平更高的毒力。毒力增加可能会作为一种遗传固定策略进化,适合于种群中混合感染的频率,或者可能作为对混合感染的条件反应而出现,即一种兼性策略。在这里,我们测试在存在竞争基因型的情况下复制率的兼性改变是否会发生并产生更大的毒力。一个重要的替代观点(目前未纳入毒力进化模型)是,宿主针对基因多样化寄生虫产生的反应可能比针对基因同质寄生虫的反应成本更高或效果更差。如果是这样,对于给定的寄生虫复制率,混合克隆感染将更具毒力。两组小鼠感染了查巴迪疟原虫的两个克隆之一,三组小鼠感染了相同两个克隆的1:9、5:5或9:1混合物。通过监测小鼠体重和红细胞密度来评估毒力。混合感染中的传播阶段密度显著高于单克隆感染。在各治疗组中,传播阶段的产生随着感染的毒力增加而增加,这一表型相关性与许多关于毒力进化的理论工作所假设的遗传相关性一致。与毒力兼性改变的理论预测一致,我们发现感染两种寄生虫克隆的小鼠比感染单克隆的小鼠体重减轻更多,平均血细胞计数更低。然而,没有一致的证据支持预测这种效应的进化模型所提出的机制。混合克隆感染中的复制率和寄生虫密度并不总是更高,并且对于给定的复制率或寄生虫密度,混合克隆感染仍然更具毒力。相反,长期贫血和传播增加可能是因为基因多样化感染被宿主清除的速度较慢。即使混合克隆感染和单克隆感染中的寄生虫密度相当,最大体重减轻也存在差异。我们认为,宿主针对多种寄生虫基因型产生免疫反应的成本更高,因此会遭受更高的毒力。