Wednesday, April 22, 2020
Parasites And Their Virulence Essays - Biology, Parasitology
  Parasites And Their Virulence    ABSTRACT   Why do some parasites kill the host they depend upon while   others coexist with their host? Two prime factors determine parasitic   virulence: the manner in which the parasite is transmitted, and the   evolutionary history of the parasite and its host. Parasites which   have colonized a new host species tend to be more virulent than   parasites which have coevolved with their hosts. Parasites which are   transmitted horizontally tend to be more virulent than those   transmitted vertically. It has been assumed that parasite-host   interactions inevitably evolve toward lower virulence. This is   contradicted by studies in which virulence is conserved or increases   over time. A model which encompasses the variability of parasite-host   interactions by synthesizing spatial (transmission) and temporal   (evolutionary) factors is examined. Lenski and May (1994) and Antia et   al. (1993) predict the modulation of virulence in parasite-host   systems by integrating evolutionary and transmissibility factors.  INTRODUCTION   Why do certain parasites exhibit high levels of virulence within   their host populations while others exhibit low virulence? The two   prime factors most frequently cited (Esch and Fernandez 1993, Toft et   al. 1991) are evolutionary history and mode of transmission.   Incongruently evolved parasite-host associations are characterized by   high virulence, while congruent evolution may result in reduced   virulence (Toft et al. 1991). Parasites transmitted vertically (from   parent to offspring) tend to be less virulent than parasites   transmitted horizontally (between unrelated individuals of the same or   different species). Studies in which virulence is shown to increase   during parasite-host interaction, as in Ebert's (1994) experiment with   Daphnia magna, necessitate a synthesis of traditionally discrete   factors to predict a coevolutionary outcome. Authors prone to   habitually use the word decrease before the word virulence are   encouraged to replace the former with modulate, which emphasizes the   need for an inclusive, predictive paradigm for parasite-host   interaction.  Evolutionary history and mode of transmission will first be   considered separately, then integrated using an equation discussed  by Antia et al. (1993) and a model proposed by Lenski and May (1994).   Transmission is a spatial factor, defined by host density and specific   qualities of host-parasite interaction, which gives direction to the   modulation of virulence. Evolution is a temporal factor which   determines the extent of the modulation. The selective pressures of   the transmission mode act on parasite populations over evolutionary   time, favoring an equilibrium level of virulence (Lenski and May   1994).  DOES COEVOLUTION DETERMINE VIRULENCE?   Incongruent evolution is the colonization of a new host species   by a parasite. It is widely reported that such colonizations, when  successful, feature high virulence due to the lack of both evolved   host defenses and parasitic self-regulation (Esch and Fernandez 1993,   Toft et al. 1991). Unsuccessful colonizations must frequently occur   when parasites encounter hosts with adequate defenses. In Africa,   indigenous ruminants experience low virulence from Trypanosoma brucei   infection, while introduced ruminants suffer fatal infections (Esch   and Fernandez 1993). There has been no time for the new host to   develop immunity, or for the parasite to self-regulate. Virulent   colonizations may occur regularly in epizootic-enzootic cycles. Sin  Nombre virus, a hemmorhagic fever virus, was epizootic in 1993 after   the population of its primary enzootic host, Peromyscus maniculatus,   had exploded, increasing the likelihood of transmission to humans   (Childs et al. 1995). Sin Nombre exhibited unusually high mortality in   human populations (Childs et al. 1995), which were being colonized by   the parasite.  It is assumed that coevolution of parasite and host will result   in decreased virulence (Esch and Fernandez 1993, Toft et al. 1991).   Sin Nombre virus was found to infect 30.4 % of the P. maniculatus   population, exhibiting little or no virulence in the mice (Childs et   al. 1995). Similar low levels of virulence have been found in the   enzootic rodent hosts of Yersinia pestis (Gage et al. 1995). In   Australia, decreased grades of virulence of myxoma virus have been   observed in rabbit populations since the virus was introduced in 1951   (Krebs C. J. 1994). Many of the most widespread parasites exhibit low   virulence, suggesting that success in parasite suprapopulation range   and abundance may be the result of reduction in virulence over time.  Hookworms are present in the small intestines of one-fifth of the   world's human population and rarely induce mortality directly  (Hotez 1995).   Evolution toward a higher level of virulence has been regarded   as an unexplainable anomaly. Parasites which do less    
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