Institute of Integrative Biology, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, United Kingdom.
Institute of Science and Technology Austria, Klosterneuburg, Austria.
Elife. 2018 Mar 9;7:e32035. doi: 10.7554/eLife.32035.
Herd immunity, a process in which resistant individuals limit the spread of a pathogen among susceptible hosts has been extensively studied in eukaryotes. Even though bacteria have evolved multiple immune systems against their phage pathogens, herd immunity in bacteria remains unexplored. Here we experimentally demonstrate that herd immunity arises during phage epidemics in structured and unstructured populations consisting of differing frequencies of susceptible and resistant cells harboring CRISPR immunity. In addition, we develop a mathematical model that quantifies how herd immunity is affected by spatial population structure, bacterial growth rate, and phage replication rate. Using our model we infer a general epidemiological rule describing the relative speed of an epidemic in partially resistant spatially structured populations. Our experimental and theoretical findings indicate that herd immunity may be important in bacterial communities, allowing for stable coexistence of bacteria and their phages and the maintenance of polymorphism in bacterial immunity.
群体免疫,即在易感染宿主中,具有抗性的个体限制病原体传播的过程,在真核生物中已经得到了广泛的研究。尽管细菌已经进化出多种针对其噬菌体病原体的免疫防御系统,但细菌中的群体免疫现象仍未被探索。在这里,我们通过实验证明,在由不同比例易感染和有抗性细胞组成的结构化和非结构化种群中,当噬菌体流行时,会出现群体免疫现象。此外,我们还开发了一个数学模型,定量描述了群体免疫如何受到空间种群结构、细菌生长率和噬菌体复制率的影响。利用我们的模型,我们推断出一个描述部分抗性的空间结构种群中流行速度的一般流行病学规则。我们的实验和理论结果表明,群体免疫在细菌群落中可能很重要,它可以使细菌与其噬菌体稳定共存,并维持细菌免疫的多态性。