Poulin Robert, Jorge Fátima, Salloum Priscila M
Department of Zoology, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand.
Otago Micro and Nano Imaging, Electron Microscopy Unit, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand.
J Anim Ecol. 2023 Apr;92(4):807-812. doi: 10.1111/1365-2656.13764. Epub 2022 Jun 29.
Alterations in host phenotype induced by metazoan parasites are widespread in nature, yet the underlying mechanisms and the sources of intraspecific variation in the extent of those alterations remain poorly understood. In light of the microbiome revolution sweeping through ecology and evolutionary biology, we hypothesise that the composition of symbiotic microbial communities living within individual parasites influences the nature and extent of their effect on host phenotype. The interests of both the parasite and its symbionts are aligned through the latter's vertical transmission, favouring joint contributions to the manipulation of host phenotype. Our hypothesis can explain the variation in the extent to which parasites alter host phenotype, as microbiome composition varies among individual parasites. We propose two non-exclusive approaches to test the hypothesis, furthering the integration of microbiomes into studies of host-parasite interactions.
后生动物寄生虫引起的宿主表型改变在自然界中广泛存在,但这些改变的潜在机制以及种内变异程度的来源仍知之甚少。鉴于微生物群落革命席卷生态和进化生物学领域,我们推测寄生于个体寄生虫体内的共生微生物群落组成会影响其对宿主表型作用的性质和程度。寄生虫及其共生体的利益通过后者的垂直传播保持一致,这有利于它们共同对宿主表型的操控做出贡献。我们的假设可以解释寄生虫改变宿主表型程度的差异,因为微生物群落组成在个体寄生虫之间存在差异。我们提出两种非排他性方法来检验这一假设,以进一步将微生物群落整合到宿主 - 寄生虫相互作用的研究中。