Páez David J, LaDeau Shannon L, Breyta Rachel, Kurath Gael, Naish Kerry A, Ferguson Paige F B
Department of Biological Sciences The University of Alabama Tuscaloosa Alabama.
Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies Millbrook New York.
Evol Appl. 2020 Feb 28;13(8):1841-1853. doi: 10.1111/eva.12931. eCollection 2020 Sep.
Many pathogens interact and evolve in communities where more than one host species is present, yet our understanding of host-pathogen specialization is mostly informed by laboratory studies with single species. Managing diseases in the wild, however, requires understanding how host-pathogen specialization affects hosts in diverse communities. Juvenile salmonid mortality in hatcheries caused by infectious hematopoietic necrosis virus (IHNV) has important implications for salmonid conservation programs. Here, we evaluate evidence for IHNV specialization on three salmonid hosts and assess how this influences intra- and interspecific transmission in hatchery-reared salmonids. We expect that while more generalist viral lineages should pose an equal risk of infection across host types, viral specialization will increase intraspecific transmission. We used Bayesian models and data from 24 hatcheries in the Columbia River Basin to reconstruct the exposure history of hatcheries with two IHNV lineages, MD and UC, allowing us to estimate the probability of juvenile infection with these lineages in three salmonid host types. Our results show that lineage MD is specialized on steelhead trout and perhaps rainbow trout (both ), whereas lineage UC displayed a generalist phenotype across steelhead trout, rainbow trout, and Chinook salmon. Furthermore, our results suggest the presence of specialist-generalist trade-offs because, while lineage UC had moderate probabilities of infection across host types, lineage MD had a small probability of infection in its nonadapted host type, Chinook salmon. Thus, in addition to quantifying probabilities of infection of socially and economically important salmonid hosts with different IHNV lineages, our results provide insights into the trade-offs that viral lineages incur in multihost communities. Our results suggest that knowledge of the specialist/generalist strategies of circulating viral lineages could be useful in salmonid conservation programs to control disease.
许多病原体在存在多种宿主物种的群落中相互作用并进化,然而我们对宿主 - 病原体特异性的理解大多来自单一物种的实验室研究。然而,在野外管理疾病需要了解宿主 - 病原体特异性如何影响不同群落中的宿主。传染性造血坏死病毒(IHNV)导致的孵化场幼年鲑科鱼类死亡对鲑科鱼类保护计划具有重要影响。在这里,我们评估了IHNV在三种鲑科宿主上的特异性证据,并评估了这如何影响孵化场养殖的鲑科鱼类的种内和种间传播。我们预计,虽然更具通用性的病毒谱系在不同宿主类型上应构成相等的感染风险,但病毒特异性将增加种内传播。我们使用贝叶斯模型和来自哥伦比亚河流域24个孵化场的数据,重建了两个IHNV谱系MD和UC的孵化场暴露历史,从而使我们能够估计这两个谱系在三种鲑科宿主类型中幼年感染的概率。我们的结果表明,MD谱系专门针对虹鳟鱼,可能还有虹鳟(两者),而UC谱系在虹鳟鱼、虹鳟和奇努克鲑鱼中表现出通用性表型。此外,我们的结果表明存在专家 - 通才权衡,因为虽然UC谱系在不同宿主类型上有中等感染概率,但MD谱系在其非适应宿主类型奇努克鲑鱼中的感染概率很小。因此,除了量化具有不同IHNV谱系的具有社会和经济重要性的鲑科宿主的感染概率外,我们的结果还提供了对病毒谱系在多宿主群落中所面临权衡的见解。我们的结果表明,了解循环病毒谱系的专家/通才策略可能有助于鲑科鱼类保护计划控制疾病。