Mivegec UMR UM, CNRS 5290 - IRD 224 Maladies Infectieuses et Vecteurs: Ecologie, Génétique, Evolution et Contrôle, Centre IRD, BP 64501, 34394 Montpellier Cedex 5, France.
IRD, UMR Interactions hôtes - vecteurs - parasites dans les infections par des trypanosomatidae - (Intertryp) UMR IRD 177, CIRAD 17, TA A-17/G, Campus International de Baillarguet, 34398 Montpellier Cedex 5, France.
Infect Genet Evol. 2017 Nov;55:186-194. doi: 10.1016/j.meegid.2017.09.012. Epub 2017 Sep 14.
Antagonistic interactions between hosts and parasites are key structuring forces in natural populations. Demographic factors like extinction, migration and the effective population size shape host-parasite metapopulational dynamics. Therefore, to understand the evolution of host-parasite systems it is necessary to study the distribution of the genetic variation of both entities simultaneously. In this paper, we investigate the population genetics co-structure of parasites and hosts within a metapopulation of the liver fluke, Fasciola hepatica, and two of its intermediate hosts, the main intermediate host in Europe, Galba truncatula, and a new intermediate host, Omphiscola glabra, in Central France. Our results reveal an absence of specificity of flukes as regard to the two alternative hosts though O. glabra shows higher prevalence of F. hepatica. Host and parasites displayed contrasting population genetics structure with very small, highly inbred (selfing) and strongly isolated G. truncatula populations and much bigger, panmictic and more dispersive F. hepatica. This could indicate a local adaptation of the parasite and a local maladaptation of the host. We also unveil a parasite-mediated biased population genetics structure suggesting that infected G. truncatula disperse more; have higher dispersal survival than uninfected snails or, more likely, that immigrant snails are infected more often than local snails (local parasites are less adapted to local hosts). Finally, an absence, or at least an ambiguous signature of isolation by distance was observed in both host and parasite population. A very weak migration rate for G. truncatula provides a reasonable explanation for this ambiguous result. Alternatively, smaller sample sizes combined with modest migration rates might explain the difficulties to unveil the signal in F. hepatica.
宿主与寄生虫之间的拮抗相互作用是自然种群结构的关键因素。灭绝、迁移和有效种群大小等人口统计学因素塑造了宿主-寄生虫复合种群动态。因此,要了解宿主-寄生虫系统的进化,就有必要同时研究两者遗传变异的分布。在本文中,我们研究了肝片吸虫(Fasciola hepatica)及其两个中间宿主——欧洲主要中间宿主圆田螺(Galba truncatula)和法国中部新中间宿主方格短沟蜷(Omphiscola glabra)——复合种群中寄生虫和宿主的种群遗传学共结构。我们的结果表明,尽管方格短沟蜷中肝片吸虫的流行率更高,但吸虫对两种替代宿主并没有特异性。宿主和寄生虫显示出相反的种群遗传结构,圆田螺种群非常小,高度自交(自交)且强烈隔离,而肝片吸虫则更大,具有扩散性且更具扩散性。这可能表明寄生虫的局部适应和宿主的局部不适应。我们还揭示了寄生虫介导的偏向种群遗传结构,表明感染的圆田螺的扩散能力更强;比未感染的蜗牛具有更高的扩散存活率,或者更可能的是,移民蜗牛比当地蜗牛更容易感染(当地寄生虫对当地宿主的适应能力较差)。最后,在宿主和寄生虫种群中都观察到缺乏(或至少存在模糊的)距离隔离信号。圆田螺非常低的迁移率为这一模糊结果提供了合理的解释。或者,较小的样本量加上适度的迁移率可能解释了在肝片吸虫中难以揭示信号的原因。