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互利共生资源影响载体竞争力。

Mutualist-Provisioned Resources Impact Vector Competency.

机构信息

Department of Biology, Eberly College of Arts and Sciences, West Virginia University, Morgantown, West Virginia, USA

Department of Biology, Eberly College of Arts and Sciences, West Virginia University, Morgantown, West Virginia, USA.

出版信息

mBio. 2019 Jun 4;10(3):e00018-19. doi: 10.1128/mBio.00018-19.

Abstract

Many symbionts supplement their host's diet with essential nutrients. However, whether these nutrients also enhance parasitism is unknown. In this study, we investigated whether folate (vitamin B) production by the tsetse fly ( spp.) essential mutualist, , aids auxotrophic African trypanosomes in completing their life cycle within this obligate vector. We show that the expression of folate biosynthesis genes changes with the progression of trypanosome infection within tsetse. The disruption of folate production caused a reduction in the percentage of flies that housed midgut (MG) trypanosome infections. However, decreased folate did not prevent MG trypanosomes from migrating to and establishing an infection in the fly's salivary glands, thus suggesting that nutrient requirements vary throughout the trypanosome life cycle. We further substantiated that trypanosomes rely on symbiont-generated folate by feeding this vitamin to , which exhibits low trypanosome vector competency and houses incapable of producing folate. Folate-supplemented flies were significantly more susceptible to trypanosome infection, further demonstrating that this vitamin facilitates parasite infection establishment. Our cumulative results provide evidence that provides a key metabolite (folate) that is "hijacked" by trypanosomes to enhance their infectivity, thus indirectly impacting tsetse species vector competency. Parasite dependence on symbiont-derived micronutrients, which likely also occurs in other arthropod vectors, represents a relationship that may be exploited to reduce disease transmission. Parasites elicit several physiological changes in their host to enhance transmission. Little is known about the functional association between parasitism and microbiota-provisioned resources typically dedicated to animal hosts and how these goods may be rerouted to optimize parasite development. This study is the first to identify a specific symbiont-generated metabolite that impacts insect vector competence by facilitating parasite establishment and, thus, eventual transmission. Specifically, we demonstrate that the tsetse fly obligate mutualist provisions folate (vitamin B) that pathogenic African trypanosomes exploit in an effort to successfully establish an infection in the vector's MG. This process is essential for the parasite to complete its life cycle and be transmitted to a new vertebrate host. Disrupting metabolic contributions provided by the microbiota of arthropod disease vectors may fuel future innovative control strategies while also offering minimal nontarget effects.

摘要

许多共生体用必需营养物质来补充宿主的饮食。然而,这些营养物质是否也能增强寄生虫的寄生能力尚不清楚。在这项研究中,我们调查了采采蝇( spp.)的必需共生体 是否能产生叶酸(维生素 B),以帮助营养缺陷型的非洲锥虫在这个专性载体中完成生命周期。我们发现,随着锥虫在采采蝇体内感染的进展, 叶酸生物合成基因的表达发生了变化。 叶酸产生的破坏导致了携带中肠(MG)锥虫感染的苍蝇比例降低。然而,减少的叶酸并没有阻止 MG 锥虫迁移并在苍蝇的唾液腺中建立感染,这表明营养需求在整个锥虫生命周期中是不同的。我们进一步证实,锥虫依赖共生体产生的叶酸,通过向 喂食这种维生素, 表现出低的锥虫媒介能力,并且携带 不能产生叶酸。补充叶酸的 苍蝇对锥虫感染的敏感性显著增加,进一步证明这种维生素促进了寄生虫感染的建立。我们的综合结果提供了证据,表明 提供了一种关键的代谢物(叶酸),被锥虫“劫持”来增强它们的感染力,从而间接影响采采蝇的媒介能力。寄生虫依赖共生体衍生的微量营养素,这可能也发生在其他节肢动物载体中,这代表了一种可能被利用来减少疾病传播的关系。寄生虫会引起宿主的几种生理变化,以增强传播。关于寄生与通常专门用于动物宿主的微生物组提供的资源之间的功能关联,以及这些物质如何可能被重新用于优化寄生虫发育,知之甚少。这项研究首次确定了一种特定的共生体产生的代谢物,通过促进寄生虫的建立来影响昆虫媒介能力,从而最终影响传播。具体来说,我们证明,采采蝇的专性共生体 提供了叶酸(维生素 B),致病性的非洲锥虫利用这种叶酸来努力在载体的 MG 中建立感染。这个过程对寄生虫完成生命周期并传播到新的脊椎动物宿主是必不可少的。破坏节肢动物病媒微生物群提供的代谢贡献可能会为未来的创新控制策略提供动力,同时还能减少非目标影响。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/6d86/6550517/94eddd0f1566/mBio.00018-19-f0001.jpg

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