宿主反应和病毒特征相互作用,形成气候变暖对迁徙水禽高致病性禽流感的影响。

IF 3.6 2区 生物学 Q1 BIOCHEMICAL RESEARCH METHODS
PLoS Computational Biology Pub Date : 2025-10-06 eCollection Date: 2025-10-01 DOI:10.1371/journal.pcbi.1013451
Claire S Teitelbaum, Michael L Casazza, Cory T Overton, Elliott L Matchett, Diann J Prosser
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引用次数: 0

摘要

新出现的传染病对野生动物种群构成威胁,最近在野生鸟类中爆发的禽流感病毒就是例证。气候变化可以通过对病原体的直接影响(例如,环境腐烂率)和宿主生态的变化(包括迁移模式的转变)来影响野生动物的感染动态。本文采用已有的迁移与感染耦合的机制模型,研究了高致病性禽流感(HPAI)病毒的特性对迁徙水禽高致病性禽流感(HPAI)结果的影响,并应用该模型探讨了气候变化对高致病性禽流感动态的潜在影响。我们发现,在基线气候条件下,高致病性禽流感对宿主种群的模拟影响从没有影响到100%死亡率不等,具体取决于病毒特征。在大多数情况下,与传播相关的特征(即接触率、脱落率)对高致病性禽流感的建立概率、感染流行率和死亡率比其他病毒特征(如环境温度敏感性、交叉保护免疫)更重要。然后,我们通过病毒环境衰变和鸟类迁徙物候变化模拟了气候变化(即温度变化)对高致病性禽流感动态的影响。在这些模拟中,我们发现春季迁徙时间提前9天增加了鸟类在繁殖地停留的时间,从而增加了高致病性禽流感爆发的持续时间,导致更高的死亡率和更少的感染。相比之下,在温暖的年份,病毒衰减的增加产生的影响较小,但相反。这些模式取决于高致病性禽流感的主要传播方式(即直接传播还是环境传播)及其对环境温度的敏感性。总之,这些结果表明,如果高致病性禽流感强烈依赖直接传播,并且鸟类提前春季迁徙,气候变化可能会增加高致病性禽流感对水禽种群的影响。进一步整合宿主-病毒共同进化和其他气候变化(如盐度、湿度)可以更精确地预测未来高致病性病毒的动态变化。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Host responses and viral traits interact to shape the impacts of climate warming on highly pathogenic avian influenza in migratory waterfowl.

Host responses and viral traits interact to shape the impacts of climate warming on highly pathogenic avian influenza in migratory waterfowl.

Host responses and viral traits interact to shape the impacts of climate warming on highly pathogenic avian influenza in migratory waterfowl.

Host responses and viral traits interact to shape the impacts of climate warming on highly pathogenic avian influenza in migratory waterfowl.

Emerging infectious diseases pose threats to wildlife populations, as exemplified by recent outbreaks of avian influenza viruses in wild birds. Climate change can affect infection dynamics in wildlife through direct effects on pathogens (e.g., environmental decay rates) and changes to host ecology, including shifting migration patterns. Here, we adapt an existing mechanistic model that couples migration and infection to study how traits of highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) viruses contribute to HPAI outcomes in migratory waterfowl, then apply this model to explore potential impacts of climate change on HPAI dynamics. We find that the simulated impacts of HPAI on the host population under baseline climate conditions varied from no impact to 100% mortality, depending on viral traits. In most cases, traits related to transmission (i.e., contact rates, shedding rates) were more important for HPAI establishment probability, infection prevalence, and mortality than were other viral traits (e.g., environmental temperature sensitivity, cross-protective immunity). We then simulated the effects of climate change (i.e., altered temperature regimes) on HPAI dynamics both via viral environmental decay and via changes in bird migration phenology. In these simulations, we found that a 9-day advancement in spring migration timing increased the duration of HPAI outbreaks by increasing time birds spent at their breeding grounds, leading to higher mortality and fewer infections. In contrast, increased viral decay in warmer years had a smaller, but opposite impact. These patterns depended on the primary transmission mode of HPAI (i.e., direct vs. environmental) and its sensitivity to environmental temperatures. Together, these results suggest that climate change is likely to increase the impacts of HPAI on waterfowl populations if HPAI relies strongly on direct transmission and birds advance their spring migration. Further integrating host-viral co-evolution and other climatic changes (e.g., salinity, humidity) could provide more precise predictions of how HPAI dynamics could change in the future.

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来源期刊
PLoS Computational Biology
PLoS Computational Biology BIOCHEMICAL RESEARCH METHODS-MATHEMATICAL & COMPUTATIONAL BIOLOGY
CiteScore
7.10
自引率
4.70%
发文量
820
审稿时长
2.5 months
期刊介绍: PLOS Computational Biology features works of exceptional significance that further our understanding of living systems at all scales—from molecules and cells, to patient populations and ecosystems—through the application of computational methods. Readers include life and computational scientists, who can take the important findings presented here to the next level of discovery. Research articles must be declared as belonging to a relevant section. More information about the sections can be found in the submission guidelines. Research articles should model aspects of biological systems, demonstrate both methodological and scientific novelty, and provide profound new biological insights. Generally, reliability and significance of biological discovery through computation should be validated and enriched by experimental studies. Inclusion of experimental validation is not required for publication, but should be referenced where possible. Inclusion of experimental validation of a modest biological discovery through computation does not render a manuscript suitable for PLOS Computational Biology. Research articles specifically designated as Methods papers should describe outstanding methods of exceptional importance that have been shown, or have the promise to provide new biological insights. The method must already be widely adopted, or have the promise of wide adoption by a broad community of users. Enhancements to existing published methods will only be considered if those enhancements bring exceptional new capabilities.
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