疟疾寄生虫可以通过感知宿主内的两种信号来优化传播投资。

IF 7.2 1区 生物学 Q1 Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Avril Wang, Megan Ann Greischar, Nicole Mideo
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引用次数: 0

摘要

投资繁殖的时机是终生繁殖成功(适应性)的关键决定因素。许多生物表现出可塑性,即环境响应性投资策略,这提出了什么样的环境线索触发反应以及为什么生物进化到对这些特定线索做出反应的问题。对于疟疾寄生虫(疟原虫)来说,投资于产生专门的传播阶段(相对于在宿主内无性复制的阶段)是生殖投资的同义词,也是可塑性的,对宿主和寄生虫衍生的因素作出反应。先前的理论已经确定了啮齿动物疟原虫chabaudi的最佳塑料传播投资策略,作为感染后时间的函数,隐含地假设寄生虫拥有关于宿主内环境及其变化的完美信息。我们将这一理论扩展到寄生虫应该使用哪些线索?换句话说,在急性感染期间,哪些线索能最大限度地提高寄生虫的适应性,量化为宿主传染性?我们的研究结果表明,感知与寄生虫相关的线索,例如受感染红细胞的丰度或传播阶段,允许寄生虫达到接近最佳时变策略的适应度,但只有当寄生虫非线性地感知线索时,对低密度变化的响应更敏感。然而,没有一个单一的线索可以重建最佳的时变策略,或者允许寄生虫在感染结束时采取终端投资,这是对生殖投资的经典期望。感知两个线索——对数转换的感染和未感染红细胞丰度——使寄生虫能够准确地跟踪感染的进展,允许终端投资,并恢复最佳时变投资策略的适应度。重要的是,能探测到两种信号的寄生虫更有效地利用宿主,与只探测到一种信号的寄生虫相比,产生更高的毒性。然而,面对环境和发育的波动,感知两种线索的寄生虫也会经历更大的适应性下降。总的来说,我们的研究结果表明,感知非冗余信号可以实现更优的传输投资,但在面对环境和发展噪声时,却不利于稳健性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Malaria parasites can optimize transmission investment by sensing two within-host cues.

The timing of investment into reproduction is a key determinant of lifetime reproductive success (fitness). Many organisms exhibit plastic, i.e., environmentally-responsive, investment strategies, raising the questions of what environmental cues trigger responses and why organisms have evolved to respond to those particular cues. For malaria parasites (Plasmodium spp.), investment into the production of specialized transmission stages (versus stages that replicate asexually within the host) is synonymous with reproductive investment and also plastic, responding to host- and parasite-derived factors. Previous theory has identified optimal plastic transmission investment strategies for the rodent malaria parasite, Plasmodium chabaudi, as a function of the time since infection, implicitly assuming that parasites have perfect information about the within-host environment and how it is changing. We extend that theory to ask which cue(s) should parasites use? Put another way, which cue(s) maximize parasite fitness, quantified as host infectiousness during acute infection? Our results show that sensing a parasite-associated cue, e.g., the abundance of infected red blood cells or transmission stages, allows parasites to achieve fitness approaching that of the optimal time-varying strategy, but only when parasites perceive the cue non-linearly, responding more sensitively to changes at low densities. However, no single cue can recreate the best time-varying strategy or allow parasites to adopt terminal investment as the infection ends, a classic expectation for reproductive investment. Sensing two cues-log-transformed infected and uninfected red blood cell abundance-enables parasites to accurately track the progression of the infection, permits terminal investment, and recovers the fitness of the optimal time-varying investment strategy. Importantly, parasites that detect two cues more efficiently exploit hosts, resulting in higher virulence compared with those sensing only one cue. However, parasites sensing two cues also experience larger fitness declines in the face of environmental and developmental fluctuations. Collectively, our results suggest that sensing non-redundant cues enables more optimal transmission investment but trades off against robustness in the face of environmental and developmental noise.

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来源期刊
PLoS Biology
PLoS Biology BIOCHEMISTRY & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY-BIOLOGY
CiteScore
15.40
自引率
2.00%
发文量
359
审稿时长
3-8 weeks
期刊介绍: PLOS Biology is the flagship journal of the Public Library of Science (PLOS) and focuses on publishing groundbreaking and relevant research in all areas of biological science. The journal features works at various scales, ranging from molecules to ecosystems, and also encourages interdisciplinary studies. PLOS Biology publishes articles that demonstrate exceptional significance, originality, and relevance, with a high standard of scientific rigor in methodology, reporting, and conclusions. The journal aims to advance science and serve the research community by transforming research communication to align with the research process. It offers evolving article types and policies that empower authors to share the complete story behind their scientific findings with a diverse global audience of researchers, educators, policymakers, patient advocacy groups, and the general public. PLOS Biology, along with other PLOS journals, is widely indexed by major services such as Crossref, Dimensions, DOAJ, Google Scholar, PubMed, PubMed Central, Scopus, and Web of Science. Additionally, PLOS Biology is indexed by various other services including AGRICOLA, Biological Abstracts, BIOSYS Previews, CABI CAB Abstracts, CABI Global Health, CAPES, CAS, CNKI, Embase, Journal Guide, MEDLINE, and Zoological Record, ensuring that the research content is easily accessible and discoverable by a wide range of audiences.
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