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协同进化促进了袋獾与一种致命的可传播癌症的共存。

Coevolution promotes the coexistence of Tasmanian devils and a fatal, transmissible cancer.

作者信息

Clement Dale T, Gallinson Dylan G, Hamede Rodrigo K, Jones Menna E, Margres Mark J, McCallum Hamish, Storfer Andrew

机构信息

Department of Biology, Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, NC, United States.

Department of Integrative Biology, University of South Florida, Tampa, FL, United States.

出版信息

Evolution. 2024 Dec 22;79(1):100-118. doi: 10.1093/evolut/qpae143.

Abstract

Emerging infectious diseases threaten natural populations, and data-driven modeling is critical for predicting population dynamics. Despite the importance of integrating ecology and evolution in models of host-pathogen dynamics, there are few wild populations for which long-term ecological datasets have been coupled with genome-scale data. Tasmanian devil (Sarcophilus harrisii) populations have declined range wide due to devil facial tumor disease (DFTD), a fatal transmissible cancer. Although early ecological models predicted imminent devil extinction, diseased devil populations persist at low densities, and recent ecological models predict long-term devil persistence. Substantial evidence supports the evolution of both devils and DFTD, suggesting coevolution may also influence continued devil persistence. Thus, we developed an individual-based, eco-evolutionary model of devil-DFTD coevolution parameterized with nearly 2 decades of devil demography, DFTD epidemiology, and genome-wide association studies. We characterized potential devil-DFTD coevolutionary outcomes and predicted the effects of coevolution on devil persistence and devil-DFTD coexistence. We found a high probability of devil persistence over 50 devil generations (100 years) and a higher likelihood of devil-DFTD coexistence, with greater devil recovery than predicted by previous ecological models. These novel results add to growing evidence for long-term devil persistence and highlight the importance of eco-evolutionary modeling for emerging infectious diseases.

摘要

新发传染病威胁着自然种群,而数据驱动的建模对于预测种群动态至关重要。尽管在宿主-病原体动态模型中整合生态学和进化很重要,但很少有野生种群的长期生态数据集与基因组规模数据相结合。袋獾(Sarcophilus harrisii)种群因袋獾面部肿瘤病(DFTD)这一致命的传染性癌症而在整个分布范围内减少。尽管早期的生态模型预测袋獾即将灭绝,但患病的袋獾种群仍以低密度持续存在,最近的生态模型预测袋獾将长期存活。大量证据支持袋獾和DFTD的进化,这表明共同进化也可能影响袋獾的持续生存。因此,我们开发了一个基于个体的袋獾-DFTD共同进化的生态进化模型,该模型用近20年的袋獾种群统计学、DFTD流行病学和全基因组关联研究进行参数化。我们描述了潜在的袋獾-DFTD共同进化结果,并预测了共同进化对袋獾生存和袋獾-DFTD共存的影响。我们发现袋獾在50代(100年)内持续生存的可能性很高,并且袋獾-DFTD共存的可能性更大,袋獾的恢复情况比以前的生态模型预测的要好。这些新结果为袋獾的长期生存提供了越来越多的证据,并突出了生态进化建模对新发传染病的重要性。

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