cE3c: Centre for Ecology, Evolution, and Environmental Changes, Faculty of Sciences; CHANGE - Global Change and Sustainability Institute, University of Lisbon, Lisboa, Portugal.
Current address, Instituto Gulbenkian de Ciência, Oeiras 2780-156, Portugal.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2024 Jul 29;379(1907):20230139. doi: 10.1098/rstb.2023.0139. Epub 2024 Jun 24.
One of the fundamental aims of ecological, epidemiological and evolutionary studies of host-parasite interactions is to unravel which factors affect parasite virulence. Theory predicts that virulence and transmission are correlated by a trade-off, as too much virulence is expected to hamper transmission owing to excessive host damage. Coinfections may affect each of these traits and/or their correlation. Here, we used inbred lines of the spider mite to test how coinfection with impacted virulence-transmission relationships at different conspecific densities. The presence of on a shared host did not change the relationship between virulence (leaf damage) and the number of transmitting stages (i.e. adult daughters). The relationship between these traits was hump-shaped across densities, both in single and coinfections, which corresponds to a trade-off. Moreover, transmission to adjacent hosts increased in coinfection, but only at low densities. Finally, we tested whether virulence and the number of daughters were correlated with measures of transmission to adjacent hosts, in single and coinfections at different conspecific densities. Traits were mostly independent, meaning that interspecific competitors may increase transmission without affecting virulence. Thus, coinfections may impact epidemiology and parasite trait evolution, but not necessarily the virulence-transmission trade-off.This article is part of the theme issue 'Diversity-dependence of dispersal: interspecific interactions determine spatial dynamics'.
一种研究宿主-寄生虫相互作用的生态学、流行病学和进化的基本目标是揭示哪些因素会影响寄生虫的毒力。理论预测,由于过度宿主损伤,毒力和传播之间存在权衡关系,因此过多的毒力会阻碍传播。合并感染可能会影响这些特征及其相关性。在这里,我们使用了蜘蛛螨的近交系来检验与共同感染的螨在不同同种种群密度下,感染对毒力-传播关系的影响。在共享宿主上存在会改变毒力(叶片损伤)和传播阶段(即成年雌性)数量之间的关系。在单感染和合并感染中,这些特征之间的关系在密度上呈驼峰形,这对应着一种权衡。此外,在合并感染中,向相邻宿主的传播增加,但仅在低密度时增加。最后,我们检验了在不同同种种群密度下的单感染和合并感染中,毒力和雌性数量是否与向相邻宿主的传播测量值相关。在单感染和合并感染中,特征大多是独立的,这意味着种间竞争者可能会增加传播而不影响毒力。因此,合并感染可能会影响流行病学和寄生虫特征的进化,但不一定会影响毒力-传播权衡。本文是主题为“扩散的多样性-依赖性:种间相互作用决定空间动态”的一部分。