MIT-WHOI Joint Program in Oceanography/Applied Ocean Science and Engineering, Cambridge and Woods Hole, MA, USA.
Department of Biology, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Woods Hole, MA, USA.
Mol Ecol. 2021 Sep;30(17):4321-4337. doi: 10.1111/mec.16038. Epub 2021 Jul 20.
By shuffling biogeographical distributions, biological invasions can both disrupt long-standing associations between hosts and parasites and establish new ones. This creates natural experiments with which to study the ecology and evolution of host-parasite interactions. In estuaries of the Gulf of Mexico, the white-fingered mud crab (Rhithropanopeus harrisii) is infected by a native parasitic barnacle, Loxothylacus panopaei (Rhizocephala), which manipulates host physiology and behaviour. In the 1960s, L. panopaei was introduced to the Chesapeake Bay and has since expanded along the southeastern Atlantic coast, while host populations in the northeast have so far been spared. We use this system to test the host's transcriptomic response to parasitic infection and investigate how this response varies with the parasite's invasion history, comparing populations representing (i) long-term sympatry between host and parasite, (ii) new associations where the parasite has invaded during the last 60 years and (iii) naïve hosts without prior exposure. A comparison of parasitized and control crabs revealed a core response, with widespread downregulation of transcripts involved in immunity and moulting. The transcriptional response differed between hosts from the parasite's native range and where it is absent, consistent with previous observations of increased susceptibility in populations lacking exposure to the parasite. Crabs from the parasite's introduced range, where prevalence is highest, displayed the most dissimilar response, possibly reflecting immune priming. These results provide molecular evidence for parasitic manipulation of host phenotype and the role of gene regulation in mediating host-parasite interactions.
生物入侵通过改变生物地理分布,可以破坏宿主和寄生虫之间长期存在的联系,并建立新的联系。这为研究宿主-寄生虫相互作用的生态学和进化提供了自然实验。在墨西哥湾的河口,白指泥蟹(Rhithropanopeus harrisii)受到一种本地寄生藤壶(Loxothylacus panopaei)(Rhizocephala)的感染,这种藤壶会操纵宿主的生理和行为。20 世纪 60 年代,L. panopaei 被引入切萨皮克湾,此后沿着东南大西洋海岸扩展,而东北部的宿主种群至今尚未受到影响。我们利用这个系统来测试宿主对寄生虫感染的转录组反应,并研究这种反应如何随着寄生虫的入侵历史而变化,比较代表(i)宿主和寄生虫长期同域共存、(ii)寄生虫在过去 60 年入侵的新关联以及(iii)没有先前暴露的宿主的种群。比较感染和未感染的螃蟹,发现了一个核心反应,广泛下调了与免疫和蜕皮相关的转录物。来自寄生虫原生范围和不存在寄生虫的宿主的转录反应不同,这与先前观察到缺乏寄生虫暴露的种群易感性增加的观察结果一致。来自寄生虫引入范围的螃蟹(那里的流行率最高)表现出最不相似的反应,这可能反映了免疫启动。这些结果为寄生虫对宿主表型的操纵以及基因调控在介导宿主-寄生虫相互作用中的作用提供了分子证据。