Houwenhuyse Shira, Macke Emilie, Reyserhove Lien, Bulteel Lore, Decaestecker Ellen
Aquatic Biology KU Leuven Kortrijk Belgium.
Evol Appl. 2017 Oct 17;11(1):29-41. doi: 10.1111/eva.12538. eCollection 2018 Jan.
Current natural populations face new interactions because of the re-emergence of ancient microbes and viruses. These risks come from the re-emergence of pathogens kept in laboratories or from pathogens that are retained in the permafrost, which become available upon thawing due to climate change. We here focus on the effects of such re-emergence in natural host populations based on evolutionary theory of virulence and long-term studies, which investigate host-pathogen adaptations. Pathogens tend to be locally and temporally adapted to their co-occurring hosts, but when pathogens from a different environment or different time enter the host community, the degree to which a new host-pathogen interaction is a threat will depend on the specific genotypic associations, the time lag between the host and the pathogen, and the interactions with native or recent host and pathogen species. Some insights can be obtained from long-term studies using a resurrection ecology approach. These long-term studies based on time-shift experiments are essential to obtain insight into the mechanisms underlying host-pathogen coevolution at several ecological and temporal scales. As past pathogens and their corresponding host(s) can differ in infectivity and susceptibility, strong reciprocal selective pressures can be induced by the pathogen. These strong selective pressures often result in an escalating arms race, but do not necessarily result in increased infectivity over time. Human health can also be impacted by these resurrected pathogens as the majority of emerging infectious diseases are zoonoses, which are infectious diseases originating from animal populations naturally transmitted to humans. The sanitary risk associated with pathogen emergence from different environments (spatial or temporal) depends on a combination of socioeconomic, environmental, and ecological factors that affect the virulence or the pathogenic potential of microbes and their ability to infect susceptible host populations.
由于古老微生物和病毒的再度出现,当前的自然种群面临着新的相互作用。这些风险源于实验室中保存的病原体的再度出现,或者源于永久冻土中留存的病原体,由于气候变化,这些病原体在解冻后变得可利用。在此,我们基于毒力进化理论和长期研究,聚焦于这种再度出现在自然宿主种群中的影响,这些研究调查宿主 - 病原体的适应性。病原体往往在局部和时间上适应与其共存的宿主,但是当来自不同环境或不同时间的病原体进入宿主群落时,新的宿主 - 病原体相互作用构成威胁的程度将取决于特定的基因型关联、宿主与病原体之间的时间滞后,以及与本地或近期宿主和病原体物种的相互作用。一些见解可以通过使用复活生态学方法的长期研究获得。这些基于时间推移实验的长期研究对于在多个生态和时间尺度上深入了解宿主 - 病原体共同进化的潜在机制至关重要。由于过去的病原体及其相应宿主在感染性和易感性方面可能不同,病原体可诱导强烈的相互选择压力。这些强烈的选择压力常常导致不断升级的军备竞赛,但不一定会随着时间的推移导致感染性增加。人类健康也可能受到这些复活病原体的影响,因为大多数新发传染病是人畜共患病,即起源于动物种群并自然传播给人类的传染病。与来自不同环境(空间或时间)的病原体出现相关的卫生风险取决于社会经济、环境和生态因素的综合作用,这些因素影响微生物的毒力或致病潜力及其感染易感宿主种群的能力。