Lockhart A B, Thrall P H, Antonovics J
Department of Botany, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina 27708, USA.
Biol Rev Camb Philos Soc. 1996 Aug;71(3):415-71. doi: 10.1111/j.1469-185x.1996.tb01281.x.
Sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) have been generally thought of as a small subset of infectious diseases, rather than as an important group of diseases that occur in numerous species. In this paper, we have (1) briefly reviewed theoretical studies on the dynamics of STDs; (2) documented the distribution of STDs in the animal kingdom; and (3) investigated whether STDs have characteristics which distinguish them from other infectious diseases. The dynamics of STDs should differ from those of ordinary infectious diseases because their transmission depends on the frequency rather than density of infectives. With this type of transmission, there is no threshold density for disease spread, and the conditions for host-pathogen coexistence are more restrictive. Nevertheless, a wide variety of disease characteristics may allow a sexually transmitted pathogen to coexist with its host. We found over 200 diseases for which there was evidence of sexual transmission. They occurred in groups as diverse as mammals, reptiles, arachnids, insects, molluscs and nematodes. Sexually transmitted pathogens included protozoans, fungi, nematodes, helminths, and cancerous cell lines, as well as bacteria and viruses. Detailed comparison of the characteristics of sexually transmitted mammalian diseases with those that are transmitted by non-sexual means, showed that STDs cause less mortality, are longer-lived in their hosts, are less likely to invoke strong immune responses, have narrower host-ranges, and show less fluctuation in prevalence over time. These shared features are related to mode of transmission rather than either host or pathogen taxonomic affiliation. This suggests an evolutionary explanation based on shared ecologies rather than one based on phylogenetic history.
性传播疾病(STDs)通常被认为是传染病中的一个小分支,而不是众多物种中发生的一组重要疾病。在本文中,我们(1)简要回顾了关于性传播疾病动态的理论研究;(2)记录了性传播疾病在动物界的分布;(3)研究了性传播疾病是否具有使其与其他传染病区分开来的特征。性传播疾病的动态应该与普通传染病不同,因为它们的传播取决于感染者的频率而非密度。通过这种传播方式,疾病传播没有阈值密度,宿主与病原体共存的条件更为严格。然而,各种各样的疾病特征可能使性传播病原体与其宿主共存。我们发现有超过200种疾病有性传播的证据。它们出现在哺乳动物、爬行动物、蛛形纲动物、昆虫、软体动物和线虫等不同类群中。性传播病原体包括原生动物、真菌、线虫、蠕虫和癌细胞系,以及细菌和病毒。对性传播的哺乳动物疾病与通过非性传播方式传播的疾病的特征进行详细比较后发现,性传播疾病导致的死亡率较低,在宿主体内存活时间更长,引发强烈免疫反应的可能性较小,宿主范围更窄,患病率随时间的波动也较小。这些共同特征与传播方式有关,而不是与宿主或病原体的分类归属有关。这表明基于共同生态而非系统发育历史的进化解释。