School of Zoology, George S. Wise Faculty of Life Sciences, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel.
Trends Parasitol. 2019 Jun;35(6):466-480. doi: 10.1016/j.pt.2019.03.008. Epub 2019 Apr 16.
In most species, variation in age among individuals is the strongest and most visible form of phenotypic variation. Individual-level age effects on disease traits, caused by differences in the age at exposure of the host or its parents, have been widely documented in invertebrates. They can influence diverse traits, such as host susceptibility, virulence, parasite reproduction and further transmission, and may cascade to the population level, influencing disease prevalence and within-host competition. Here, I summarize what is known about the relationship between individual-level age/stage effects and infectious disease in invertebrates. I also attempt to link age effects to the theory of aging (senescence), and highlight the importance of population age structure to disease epidemiology and evolution. I conclude by identifying gaps in our understanding of individual- and population-level age effects in invertebrates. As the age structure of populations varies across space and time, age effects have strong epidemiological, ecological, and evolutionary implications for explaining variation in infectious diseases of invertebrates.
在大多数物种中,个体之间的年龄变化是表型变异中最强和最明显的形式。个体水平上的年龄对疾病特征的影响,是由宿主或其父母暴露年龄的差异引起的,在无脊椎动物中已有广泛的记载。它们可以影响宿主易感性、毒力、寄生虫繁殖和进一步传播等多种特征,并可能在种群水平上产生级联效应,影响疾病的流行和宿主体内竞争。在这里,我总结了关于个体水平上的年龄/阶段效应与无脊椎动物传染病之间关系的已知信息。我还试图将年龄效应与衰老(衰老)理论联系起来,并强调种群年龄结构对疾病流行病学和进化的重要性。最后,我确定了我们对无脊椎动物个体和种群年龄效应理解的差距。由于种群的年龄结构在空间和时间上存在差异,因此年龄效应对解释无脊椎动物传染病的变异具有很强的流行病学、生态和进化意义。