噬菌体能告诉我们什么是宿主-病原体协同进化?

International journal of evolutionary biology Pub Date : 2012-01-01 Epub Date: 2012-11-18 DOI:10.1155/2012/396165
John J Dennehy
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引用次数: 0

摘要

宿主与寄生虫相互作用的结果取决于作用于它们的共同进化力,但由于每一种宿主与寄生虫的关系都被异质景观中的生物与非生物相互作用网所缠绕,宿主与寄生虫的共同进化已被证明难以研究。简单的实验室噬菌体-细菌微生态系统可以通过对数量有限的相互作用者进行可控的、重复性良好的实验来改善这一困难。从这些研究中获得的遗传、种群和生活史数据可以让我们更仔细地研究宿主与寄生虫共同进化的基本相关性。在本文中,我将介绍噬菌体-细菌协同进化研究的结果及其对宿主-寄生虫协同进化研究的影响。最近的实验研究证实了实验室中的噬菌体-宿主协同进化动态,并表明协同进化可以提高寄生虫的毒性、特化、适应性和多样性。从遗传学角度看,共同进化经常以 "基因对基因 "模型(Gene for Gene model)所描述的方式进行,以军备竞赛动态为典型,但在某些情况下,根据 "匹配等位基因 "模型(Matching Alleles model),可能会出现 "红皇后"(Red Queen)动态。虽然某些特征似乎只适用于噬菌体-细菌系统,但其他结果具有广泛的普遍性,适用于所有对抗性协同进化的情况。通过实验室宿主-寄生虫协同进化研究,我们可以更好地理解野生生物多样性所特有的一系列令人困惑的相互作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

What Can Phages Tell Us about Host-Pathogen Coevolution?

What Can Phages Tell Us about Host-Pathogen Coevolution?

What Can Phages Tell Us about Host-Pathogen Coevolution?

The outcomes of host-parasite interactions depend on the coevolutionary forces acting upon them, but because every host-parasite relation is enmeshed in a web of biotic and abiotic interactions across a heterogeneous landscape, host-parasite coevolution has proven difficult to study. Simple laboratory phage-bacteria microcosms can ameliorate this difficulty by allowing controlled, well-replicated experiments with a limited number of interactors. Genetic, population, and life history data obtained from these studies permit a closer examination of the fundamental correlates of host-parasite coevolution. In this paper, I describe the results of phage-bacteria coevolutionary studies and their implications for the study of host-parasite coevolution. Recent experimental studies have confirmed phage-host coevolutionary dynamics in the laboratory and have shown that coevolution can increase parasite virulence, specialization, adaptation, and diversity. Genetically, coevolution frequently proceeds in a manner best described by the Gene for Gene model, typified by arms race dynamics, but certain contexts can result in Red Queen dynamics according to the Matching Alleles model. Although some features appear to apply only to phage-bacteria systems, other results are broadly generalizable and apply to all instances of antagonistic coevolution. With laboratory host-parasite coevolutionary studies, we can better understand the perplexing array of interactions that characterize organismal diversity in the wild.

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