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测试疟原虫节律的进化驱动因素及其对宿主-寄生虫相互作用的影响。

Testing the evolutionary drivers of malaria parasite rhythms and their consequences for host-parasite interactions.

作者信息

Holland Jacob G, Prior Kimberley F, O'Donnell Aidan J, Reece Sarah E

机构信息

Institute of Ecology and Evolution University of Edinburgh Edinburgh UK.

Institute of Immunology and Infection Research University of Edinburgh Edinburgh UK.

出版信息

Evol Appl. 2024 Jul 14;17(7):e13752. doi: 10.1111/eva.13752. eCollection 2024 Jul.

Abstract

Undertaking certain activities at the time of day that maximises fitness is assumed to explain the evolution of circadian clocks. Organisms often use daily environmental cues such as light and food availability to set the timing of their clocks. These cues may be the environmental rhythms that ultimately determine fitness, act as proxies for the timing of less tractable ultimate drivers, or are used simply to maintain internal synchrony. While many pathogens/parasites undertake rhythmic activities, both the proximate and ultimate drivers of their rhythms are poorly understood. Explaining the roles of rhythms in infections offers avenues for novel interventions to interfere with parasite fitness and reduce the severity and spread of disease. Here, we perturb several rhythms in the hosts of malaria parasites to investigate why parasites align their rhythmic replication to the host's feeding-fasting rhythm. We manipulated host rhythms governed by light, food or both, and assessed the fitness implications for parasites, and the consequences for hosts, to test which host rhythms represent ultimate drivers of the parasite's rhythm. We found that alignment with the host's light-driven rhythms did not affect parasite fitness metrics. In contrast, aligning with the timing of feeding-fasting rhythms may be beneficial for the parasite, but only when the host possess a functional canonical circadian clock. Because parasites in clock-disrupted hosts align with the host's feeding-fasting rhythms and yet derive no apparent benefit, our results suggest cue(s) from host food act as a proxy rather than being a key selective driver of the parasite's rhythm. Alternatively, parasite rhythmicity may only be beneficial because it promotes synchrony between parasite cells and/or allows parasites to align to the biting rhythms of vectors. Our results also suggest that interventions can disrupt parasite rhythms by targeting the proxies or the selective factors driving them without impacting host health.

摘要

在一天中进行能使健康最大化的特定活动,被认为可以解释昼夜节律钟的进化。生物体通常利用诸如光照和食物可获得性等日常环境线索来设定其生物钟的时间。这些线索可能是最终决定健康的环境节律,作为难以捉摸的最终驱动因素时间的替代指标,或者仅仅用于维持内部同步。虽然许多病原体/寄生虫会进行有节律的活动,但其节律的近端和最终驱动因素却知之甚少。解释节律在感染中的作用为干扰寄生虫健康、降低疾病严重程度和传播的新型干预措施提供了途径。在这里,我们扰乱疟原虫宿主的几种节律,以研究寄生虫为何将其节律性复制与宿主的进食-禁食节律同步。我们操纵受光照、食物或两者控制的宿主节律,并评估对寄生虫健康的影响以及对宿主的后果,以测试哪些宿主节律代表寄生虫节律的最终驱动因素。我们发现与宿主的光照驱动节律同步不会影响寄生虫的健康指标。相比之下,与进食-禁食节律的时间同步可能对寄生虫有益,但前提是宿主拥有功能性的典型昼夜节律钟。因为生物钟被破坏的宿主中的寄生虫与宿主的进食-禁食节律同步,但并未获得明显益处,我们的结果表明宿主食物的线索是替代指标,而非寄生虫节律的关键选择驱动因素。或者,寄生虫的节律性可能仅因其促进寄生虫细胞之间的同步和/或使寄生虫与媒介的叮咬节律同步才有益。我们的结果还表明,干预措施可以通过针对驱动寄生虫节律的替代指标或选择因素来破坏寄生虫节律,而不影响宿主健康。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/164e/11246599/a858280b7796/EVA-17-e13752-g004.jpg

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