Department of Veterinary Tropical Diseases, Faculty of Veterinary Science, University of Pretoria, Pretoria, South Africa.
Wisconsin Cooperative Wildlife Research Unit, Department of Forest and Wildlife Ecology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, United States.
Front Immunol. 2022 Feb 14;13:814031. doi: 10.3389/fimmu.2022.814031. eCollection 2022.
Exposure and immunity to generalist pathogens differ among host species and vary across spatial scales. Anthrax, caused by a multi-host bacterial pathogen, , is enzootic in Kruger National Park (KNP), South Africa and Etosha National Park (ENP), Namibia. These parks share many of the same potential host species, yet the main anthrax host in one (greater kudu () in KNP and plains zebra () in ENP) is only a minor host in the other. We investigated species and spatial patterns in anthrax mortalities, exposure, and the ability to neutralize the anthrax lethal toxin to determine if observed host mortality differences between locations could be attributed to population-level variation in pathogen exposure and/or immune response. Using serum collected from zebra and kudu in high and low incidence areas of each park (18- 20 samples/species/area), we estimated pathogen exposure from anti-protective antigen (PA) antibody response using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and lethal toxin neutralization with a toxin neutralization assay (TNA). Serological evidence of pathogen exposure followed mortality patterns within each system (kudus: 95% positive in KNP versus 40% in ENP; zebras: 83% positive in ENP versus 63% in KNP). Animals in the high-incidence area of KNP had higher anti-PA responses than those in the low-incidence area, but there were no significant differences in exposure by area within ENP. Toxin neutralizing ability was higher for host populations with lower exposure prevalence, i.e., higher in ENP kudus and KNP zebras than their conspecifics in the other park. These results indicate that host species differ in their exposure to and adaptive immunity against in the two parks. These patterns may be due to environmental differences such as vegetation, rainfall patterns, landscape or forage availability between these systems and their interplay with host behavior (foraging or other risky behaviors), resulting in differences in exposure frequency and dose, and hence immune response.
炭疽是一种多宿主细菌病原体引起的疾病,在南非克鲁格国家公园(KNP)和纳米比亚埃托沙国家公园(ENP)等地呈地方性流行。这两个公园有许多相同的潜在宿主物种,但一个公园(克鲁格国家公园的大角斑羚和埃托沙国家公园的平原斑马)的主要炭疽宿主在另一个公园中只是次要宿主。我们研究了炭疽死亡率、暴露和中和炭疽致死毒素的能力的物种和空间模式,以确定观察到的宿主死亡率在两个地点之间的差异是否可以归因于病原体暴露和/或免疫反应的种群水平变化。我们使用从两个公园高发病率和低发病率地区收集的斑马和大角斑羚血清(每个物种/地区 18-20 个样本),通过酶联免疫吸附测定(ELISA)从抗保护性抗原(PA)抗体反应中估计病原体暴露情况,并通过毒素中和测定(TNA)中和致死毒素。血清学证据表明,病原体暴露与每个系统内的死亡率模式有关(KNP 的大角斑羚:95%呈阳性,而 ENP 的大角斑羚为 40%;ENP 的斑马:83%呈阳性,而 KNP 的斑马为 63%)。KNP 高发病率地区的动物比低发病率地区的动物有更高的抗-PA 反应,但在 ENP 内,不同地区的暴露没有显著差异。暴露流行率较低的宿主群体具有更高的毒素中和能力,即 ENP 的大角斑羚和 KNP 的斑马比其他公园的同类动物更高。这些结果表明,宿主物种在两个公园中对炭疽的暴露和适应性免疫存在差异。这些模式可能是由于这些系统之间的环境差异,如植被、降雨模式、景观或饲料可用性,以及宿主行为(觅食或其他危险行为)的相互作用,导致暴露频率和剂量的差异,从而导致免疫反应的差异。