Department of Biology, Indiana University Bloomington, 1001 E 3rd Street, Bloomington, IN, USA.
Department of Biology, Emory University, 1510 Clifton Road NE, Atlanta, GA, USA.
Biol Lett. 2019 Aug 30;15(8):20190432. doi: 10.1098/rsbl.2019.0432. Epub 2019 Aug 28.
Disease virulence may be strongly influenced by social interactions among pathogens, both during the time course of an infection and evolutionarily. Here, we examine how spiteful bacteriocin production in the insect-pathogenic bacterium Xenorhabdus nematophila is evolutionarily linked to its virulence. We expected a negative correlation between virulence and spite owing to their inverse correlations with growth. We examined bacteriocin production and growth across 14 experimentally evolved lineages that show faster host-killing relative to their ancestral population. Consistent with expectations, these more virulent lineages showed reduced bacteriocin production and faster growth relative to the ancestor. Further, bacteriocin production was negatively correlated with growth across the examined lineages. These results strongly support an evolutionary trade-off between virulence and bacteriocin production and lend credence to the view that disease management can be improved by exploiting pathogen social interactions.
疾病毒力可能会受到病原体之间的社交互动的强烈影响,无论是在感染过程中还是在进化过程中。在这里,我们研究了昆虫病原体 Xenorhabdus nematophila 中恶意细菌素的产生如何与其毒力在进化上联系在一起。我们预计毒力和恶意之间存在负相关关系,因为它们与生长呈负相关。我们检查了 14 个经过实验进化的谱系中的细菌素产生和生长情况,这些谱系相对于其祖先种群具有更快的宿主杀伤速度。与预期一致,这些更具毒力的谱系相对于祖先表现出减少的细菌素产生和更快的生长。此外,细菌素的产生与整个检查谱系中的生长呈负相关。这些结果强烈支持毒力和细菌素产生之间存在进化权衡的观点,并为利用病原体社交互动来改善疾病管理的观点提供了可信度。