Pathogen growth and virulence dynamics drive the host evolution against coinfections

IF 9.1 1区 综合性期刊 Q1 MULTIDISCIPLINARY SCIENCES
Srijan Seal, Dipendra Nath Basu, Kripanjali Ghosh, Aryan Ramachandran, Rintu Kutum, Triveni Shelke, Ishaan Gupta, Imroze Khan
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

The occurrence of coinfections, where hosts are simultaneously infected by multiple pathogens, is widespread in nature and has significant negative impacts on global health. In humans, over one-sixth of the world’s population is affected by coinfections, contributing to several diseases. However, despite the broad ecological relevance and impact on global health, most biomedical research has focused on understanding interactions between a single host and a single pathogen. The extent to which coinfections could impact host adaptation and immune system evolution, particularly in comparison to infections by single pathogens, thus remains largely unknown. Also, what roles do individual pathogen species play in this evolutionary process? To address these questions, in this study, we combined theoretical modeling and experimental validation in a model insect Tribolium castaneum evolving against two coinfecting bacterial pathogens with contrasting growth (e.g., fast- vs slow-growing) and virulence (fast- vs slow-killing) dynamics. Our findings show that fast-growing pathogens causing rapid mortality surges (i.e., fast-acting) can effectively limit the host’s adaptive success against coinfections. While hosts rapidly evolved better survival against slow-growing bacteria causing long-lasting infections, adaptation against coinfections was significantly delayed and resembled the slow rate of adaptation against fast-acting pathogens. Finally, RNAseq analyses revealed that the observed delay in adaptation was associated with the limited scopes for suitable immune modulations against fast-acting pathogens. They might also be costly and pleiotropic (e.g., phenoloxidase activity), posing challenges for further immunomodulation and slowing adaptation. Our study thus highlights how individual pathogens’ growth and virulence dynamics critically regulate adaptive responses against coinfections.
病原体生长和毒力动态驱动宿主进化对抗共感染
共感染,即宿主同时被多种病原体感染,在自然界广泛存在,并对全球健康产生重大负面影响。在人类中,超过六分之一的世界人口受到双重感染的影响,导致多种疾病。然而,尽管广泛的生态相关性和对全球健康的影响,大多数生物医学研究都集中在了解单一宿主和单一病原体之间的相互作用。因此,与单一病原体感染相比,共感染对宿主适应和免疫系统进化的影响程度在很大程度上仍然未知。另外,单个病原体物种在这个进化过程中扮演什么角色?为了解决这些问题,在本研究中,我们将理论建模和实验验证相结合,在一种模型昆虫中进化,对抗两种共同感染的细菌病原体,并对比生长(例如,快速与缓慢生长)和毒力(快速与慢速杀死)动态。我们的研究结果表明,快速生长的病原体导致快速死亡率激增(即快速作用),可以有效地限制宿主对共感染的适应性成功。虽然宿主迅速进化出更好的生存能力,以对抗导致长期感染的缓慢生长的细菌,但对共同感染的适应明显延迟,类似于对快速作用的病原体的缓慢适应。最后,RNAseq分析显示,观察到的适应延迟与针对速效病原体的适当免疫调节范围有限有关。它们也可能是昂贵的和多效性的(例如,酚氧化酶活性),对进一步的免疫调节和减缓适应提出了挑战。因此,我们的研究强调了个体病原体的生长和毒力动态如何关键地调节对共感染的适应性反应。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
19.00
自引率
0.90%
发文量
3575
审稿时长
2.5 months
期刊介绍: The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), a peer-reviewed journal of the National Academy of Sciences (NAS), serves as an authoritative source for high-impact, original research across the biological, physical, and social sciences. With a global scope, the journal welcomes submissions from researchers worldwide, making it an inclusive platform for advancing scientific knowledge.
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