Department of Aquatic Ecology, Netherlands Institute of Ecology (NIOO-KNAW), Wageningen, The Netherlands.
Department of Freshwater and Marine Ecology, Institute for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Dynamics, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Ecology. 2023 Dec;104(12):e4170. doi: 10.1002/ecy.4170. Epub 2023 Nov 1.
Hosts rely on the availability of nutrients for growth, and for defense against pathogens. At the same time, changes in host nutrition can alter the dynamics of pathogens that rely on their host for reproduction. For primary producer hosts, enhanced nutrient loads may increase host biomass or pathogen reproduction, promoting faster density-dependent pathogen transmission. However, the effect of elevated nutrients may be reduced if hosts allocate a growth-limiting nutrient to pathogen defense. In canonical disease models, transmission is not a function of nutrient availability. Yet, including nutrient availability is necessary to mechanistically understand the response of infection to changes in the environment. Here, we explore the implications of nutrient-mediated pathogen infectivity and host immunity on infection outcomes. We developed a stoichiometric disease model that explicitly integrates the contrasting dependencies of pathogen infectivity and host immunity on nitrogen (N) and parameterized it for an algal-host system. Our findings reveal dynamic shifts in host biomass build-up, pathogen prevalence, and the force of infection along N supply gradients with N-mediated host infectivity and immunity, compared with a model in which the transmission rate was fixed. We show contrasting responses in pathogen performance with increasing N supply between N-mediated infectivity and N-mediated immunity, revealing an optimum for pathogen transmission at intermediate N supply. This was caused by N limitation of the pathogen at a low N supply and by pathogen suppression via enhanced host immunity at a high N supply. By integrating both nutrient-mediated pathogen infectivity and host immunity into a stoichiometric model, we provide a theoretical framework that is a first step in reconciling the contrasting role nutrients can have on host-pathogen dynamics.
宿主依赖营养物质的可利用性来生长,并抵御病原体。与此同时,宿主营养的变化可以改变依赖宿主繁殖的病原体的动态。对于初级生产者宿主来说,增强的营养负荷可能会增加宿主生物量或病原体繁殖,从而促进更快的密度依赖型病原体传播。然而,如果宿主将一种限制生长的营养物质分配给病原体防御,那么升高的营养物质的效果可能会降低。在典型的疾病模型中,传播不是营养物质可利用性的函数。然而,包括营养物质的可利用性是从机制上理解感染对环境变化的反应所必需的。在这里,我们探讨了营养物质介导的病原体感染力和宿主免疫力对感染结果的影响。我们开发了一个计量疾病模型,该模型明确地将病原体感染力和宿主免疫力对氮(N)的相反依赖关系整合在一起,并针对藻类宿主系统对其进行了参数化。我们的研究结果表明,与固定的传播率模型相比,在 N 供应梯度下,N 介导的宿主感染力和免疫力会导致宿主生物量积累、病原体流行率和感染强度发生动态变化。我们还发现,在 N 供应增加时,病原体的表现会出现相反的反应,在 N 介导的感染力和 N 介导的免疫力之间存在一个最佳的病原体传播点,这是由于在低 N 供应下病原体受到 N 限制,以及在高 N 供应下通过增强宿主免疫力抑制病原体所致。通过将营养物质介导的病原体感染力和宿主免疫力都整合到一个计量模型中,我们提供了一个理论框架,这是协调营养物质对宿主-病原体动态的相反作用的第一步。