Department of Entomology, Plant Pathology and Nematology, University of Idaho, Moscow, Idaho 83844-2329; email:
Department of Forest and Rangeland Stewardship, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado 80523-1472; email:
Annu Rev Entomol. 2018 Jan 7;63:169-191. doi: 10.1146/annurev-ento-020117-043119. Epub 2017 Oct 2.
The transmission of insect-borne plant pathogens, including viruses, bacteria, phytoplasmas, and fungi depends upon the abundance and behavior of their vectors. These pathogens should therefore be selected to influence their vectors to enhance their transmission, either indirectly, through the infected host plant, or directly, after acquisition of the pathogen by the vector. Accumulating evidence provides partial support for the occurrence of vector manipulation by plant pathogens, especially for plant viruses, for which a theoretical framework can explain patterns in the specific effects on vector behavior and performance depending on their modes of transmission. The variability in effects of pathogens on their vectors, however, suggests inconsistency in the occurrence of vector manipulation but also may reflect incomplete information about these systems. For example, manipulation can occur through combinations of specific effects, including direct and indirect effects on performance and behavior, and dynamics in those effects with disease progression or pathogen acquisition that together constitute syndromes that promote pathogen spread. Deciphering the prevalence and forms of vector manipulation by plant pathogens remains a compelling field of inquiry, but gaps and opportunities to advance it remain. A proposed research agenda includes examining vector manipulation syndromes comprehensively within pathosystems, expanding the taxonomic and genetic breadth of the systems studied, evaluating dynamic effects that occur during disease progression, incorporating the influence of biotic and abiotic environmental factors, evaluating the effectiveness of putative manipulation syndromes under field conditions, deciphering chemical and molecular mechanisms whereby pathogens can influence vectors, expanding the use of evolutionary and epidemiological models, and seeking opportunities to exploit these effects to improve management of insect-borne, economically important plant pathogens. We expect this field to remain vibrant and productive in its own right and as part of a wider inquiry concerning host and vector manipulation by plant and animal pathogens and parasites.
昆虫传播的植物病原体(包括病毒、细菌、植原体和真菌)的传播取决于其载体的丰度和行为。因此,这些病原体应该被选择来影响它们的载体,以增强它们的传播,要么通过感染的宿主植物间接影响,要么通过载体获得病原体直接影响。越来越多的证据为植物病原体对其载体的操纵提供了部分支持,特别是对于植物病毒,对于植物病毒,有一个理论框架可以解释其对载体行为和性能的具体影响模式,具体取决于它们的传播方式。然而,病原体对其载体的影响的可变性表明,载体操纵的发生并不一致,但也可能反映出这些系统的信息不完整。例如,操纵可以通过特定效应的组合发生,包括对性能和行为的直接和间接影响,以及随着疾病进展或病原体获得而变化的那些效应的动态,这些效应共同构成促进病原体传播的综合征。破译植物病原体对其载体的操纵的普遍性和形式仍然是一个引人入胜的研究领域,但仍存在差距和机会来推进这一领域。一个拟议的研究议程包括在病理系统中全面研究载体操纵综合征,扩大所研究系统的分类和遗传广度,评估疾病进展过程中发生的动态效应,纳入生物和非生物环境因素的影响,评估假定操纵综合征在田间条件下的有效性,破译病原体影响载体的化学和分子机制,扩大进化和流行病学模型的使用,并寻求利用这些效应的机会来改善对昆虫传播的、具有经济重要性的植物病原体的管理。我们预计,这一领域本身将保持活力和富有成效,并作为更广泛的研究的一部分,涉及动植物病原体和寄生虫对宿主和载体的操纵。