Richie T L
Department of Biology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia 19104.
Parasitology. 1988 Jun;96 ( Pt 3):607-39. doi: 10.1017/s0031182000080227.
Several species of malarial protozoans commonly parasitize the same host population and often the same individual host. This paper reviews the evidence for interactions among such host-sharing parasites. Field studies measuring the cross-sectional prevalence of malarial species often record fewer mixed infections than expected by chance, suggesting that one parasite has excluded another or suppressed its parasitaemia to undetectable levels. Prevalences may vary reciprocally between seasons, with one species increasing in prevalence while another decreases, despite parallel increases in the transmission rates of both, again suggesting suppression of one species by another. However, longitudinal studies of individual hosts indicate that malarial parasites may also favourably affect the host environment for each other, perhaps due to their depressive effect on the immune system: this is shown by the recrudescence of a latent malarial species immediately before or after the parasitic wave of another species. The suppression hypothesis is supported by data derived from the simultaneous inoculation of two Plasmodium species into laboratory animals; many studies have shown that one or both species are suppressed. This may be mediated by competition for host cells or nutrients, or by heterologous immunity. However, the suppressed species rebounds after the other species has abated, and may show a prolonged infection. Experimental evidence that one species can facilitate the recrudescence of another is minimal, but this may reflect the paucity of investigations of this phenomenon. Laboratory studies show only minor cross-resistance between host-sharing species, which is consistent with the hypothesis that their co-occurrence has led to antigenic divergence or that species showing strong heterologous resistance cannot co-exist in the same host population. Such complementarity occurs not only with the host immune response but also with many other life-history characteristics of host-sharing parasites, such as host cell preference. I conclude that malarial species have been important in each other's evolution, particularly in the tropics where multi-species complexes are common.
几种疟原虫通常寄生于同一宿主群体,而且常常寄生于同一个体宿主。本文综述了关于这些共享宿主的寄生虫之间相互作用的证据。测量疟原虫种类横断面流行率的现场研究常常记录到混合感染的情况比随机预期的要少,这表明一种寄生虫排除了另一种,或者将其寄生虫血症抑制到了检测不到的水平。不同季节流行率可能呈反比变化,一种疟原虫的流行率上升而另一种下降,尽管两者的传播率都同时上升,这再次表明一种疟原虫受到了另一种的抑制。然而,对个体宿主的纵向研究表明,疟原虫彼此之间也可能对宿主环境产生有利影响,这可能是由于它们对免疫系统的抑制作用:这表现为一种潜伏疟原虫种类在另一种疟原虫种类的寄生高峰之前或之后立即复发。抑制假说得到了将两种疟原虫同时接种到实验动物体内所获得数据的支持;许多研究表明,一种或两种疟原虫种类都受到了抑制。这可能是由对宿主细胞或营养物质的竞争,或者由异源免疫介导的。然而,被抑制的疟原虫种类在另一种疟原虫种类消退后会反弹,并且可能会出现持续时间较长的感染。一种疟原虫种类能够促进另一种疟原虫种类复发的实验证据很少,但这可能反映了对这一现象的研究较少。实验室研究表明,共享宿主的疟原虫种类之间只有轻微的交叉抗性,这与它们共存导致抗原性分化的假说一致,或者与显示出强烈异源抗性的疟原虫种类不能在同一宿主群体中共存的假说一致。这种互补性不仅体现在宿主免疫反应方面,也体现在共享宿主的寄生虫的许多其他生活史特征方面,例如对宿主细胞的偏好。我的结论是,疟原虫种类在彼此的进化过程中起到了重要作用,特别是在热带地区,那里多物种复合体很常见。