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1.
Microsporidia are unusual amongst eukaryotic parasites in that they utilize both vertical and horizontal transmission and vertically transmitted species can cause sex ratio distortion in their host. Here we study vertical transmission in two species of feminising microsporidia, Nosema granulosis and Dictyocoela duebenum, infecting a single population of the crustacean host Gammarus duebeni and measure the effect of temperature on parasite transmission and replication. N. granulosis was vertically transmitted to 82% of the host embryos and D. duebenum was transmitted to 72% of host embryos. For both parasites, we report relatively low parasite burdens in developing host embryos. However, the parasites differ in their pattern of replication and burden within developing embryos. Whilst N. granulosis undergoes replication during host development, the burden of D. duebenum declines, leading us to propose that parasite dosage and feminisation efficiency underlie the different parasite frequencies in the field. We also examine the effect of temperature on parasite transmission and replication. Temperature does not affect the percentage of young that inherit the infection. However, low temperatures inhibit parasite replication relative to host cell division, resulting in a reduction in parasite burden in infected embryos. The reduced parasite burden at low temperatures may underpin reduced feminization at low temperatures and so limit the spread of sex ratio distorters through the host population.  相似文献   

2.
Local adaptation theory predicts that, on average, most parasite species should be locally adapted to their hosts (more suited to hosts from local than distant populations). Local adaptation has been studied for many horizontally transmitted parasites, however, vertically transmitted parasites have received little attention. Here we present the first study of local adaptation in an animal/parasite system where the parasite is vertically transmitted. We investigate local adaptation and patterns of virulence in a crustacean host infected with the vertically transmitted microsporidian Nosema granulosis. Nosema granulosis is vertically transmitted to successive generations of its crustacean host, Gammarus duebeni and infects up to 46% of adult females in natural populations. We investigate local adaptation using artificial horizontal infection of different host populations in the UK. Parasites were artificially inoculated from a donor population into recipient hosts from the sympatric population and into hosts from three allopatric populations in the UK. The parasite was successfully established in hosts from all populations regardless of location, infecting 45% of the recipients. Nosema granulosis was vertically (transovarially) transmitted to 39% of the offspring of artificially infected females. Parasite burden (intensity of infection) in developing embryos differed significantly between host populations and was an order of magnitude higher in the sympatric population, suggesting some degree of host population specificity with the parasite adapted to its local host population. In contrast with natural infections, artificial infection with the parasite resulted in substantial virulence, with reduced host fecundity (24%) and survival (44%) of infected hosts from all the populations regardless of location. We discuss our findings in relation to theories of local adaptation and parasite-host coevolution.  相似文献   

3.
The amphipod crustacean Gammarus duebeni hosts two species of vertically transmitted microsporidian parasites, Nosema granulosis and Microsporidium sp. A. Here it is demonstrated that these co-occurring parasite species both cause infected females to produce female-biased broods. A survey of European G. duebeni populations demonstrates that these two parasites co-occur in six of 10 populations. These findings contrast with the theoretical prediction that two vertically transmitted feminizing parasites should not coexist in a panmictic population of susceptible hosts at equilibrium. Possible explanations for the co-occurrence of the two feminizing microsporidia in G. duebeni include the recent invasion of a new parasite, horizontal transmission of one or both parasites and the spread of alleles for resistance to the dominant parasite in host populations.  相似文献   

4.
We investigated the prevalence, transmission mode and fitness effects of infections by obligatory intracellular, microsporidian parasites in the freshwater amphipod Gammarus roeseli. We found three different microsporidia species in this host, all using transovarial (vertical) transmission. All three coexist at different prevalences in two host populations, but bi-infected individuals were rarely found, suggesting no (or very little) horizontal transmission. It is predicted that vertically-transmitted parasites may exhibit sex-specific virulence in their hosts, or they may have either positive or neutral effects on host fitness. All three species differed in their transmission efficiency and infection intensity and our data suggest that these microsporidia exert sex-specific virulence by feminising male hosts. The patterns of infection we found exhibit convergent evolution with those of another amphipod host, Gammarus duebeni. Interestingly, we found that infected females breed earlier in the reproductive season than uninfected females. This is the first study, to our knowledge, to report a positive effect of microsporidian infection on female host reproduction.  相似文献   

5.
A novel microsporidian parasite is described, which infects the crustacean host Gammarus duebeni. The parasite was transovarially transmitted and feminised host offspring. The life cycle was monomorphic with three stages. Meronts were found in host embryos, juveniles, and in the gonadal tissue of adults. Sporoblasts and spores were restricted to the gonad. Sporogony was disporoblastic giving rise to paired sporoblasts, which then differentiated to form spores. Spores were not found in regular groupings and there was no interfacial envelope. Spores were approximately 3.78 x 1.22 microns and had a thin exospore wall, a short polar filament, and an unusual granular polaroplast. All life cycle stages were diplokaryotic. A region from the parasite small subunit ribosomal RNA gene was amplified and sequenced. Phylogenetic analysis based on these data places the parasite within the genus Nosema. We have named the species Nosema granulosis based on the structure of the polaroplast.  相似文献   

6.
Feminising microsporidian parasites are transmitted vertically from generation to generation of their crustacean hosts. Little is known about the mechanisms underpinning vertical transmission, in particular, parasite transmission to the host gonad during host development. Here, we investigate the burden and distribution of two species of vertically transmitted, feminising microsporidia (Dictyocoela duebenum and Nosema granulosis) during early embryogenesis (zygote to eight-cells) of the Gammarus duebeni host. Parasite burden differs between the two parasites with N. granulosis being higher by a factor of 10. Whilst D. duebenum replicates during the first few host cell divisions, there is no increase in N. granulosis burden. Only merogonic parasite stages were observed in the host embryo. Distribution of both parasites was non-random from the two-cell embryo stage, indicating biased parasite segregation at host cell division. Dictyocoela duebenum burden was low in the germline and somatic gonad progenitor cells but was highest in the ectoderm precursors, leading us to propose that the parasite targets these cells and then secondarily infects the gonad later in host development. Targeting by N. granulosis was less specific although there was a persistent bias in parasite distribution throughout host cell divisions. Parasite burden was highest in the ectoderm precursors as well as the germline progenitors leading us to suggest that, in addition to using the ectodermal route, N. granulosis may also target germline directly. Biased segregation will be adaptive for these parasites as it is likely to lead to efficient transmission and feminisation whilst minimising virulence in the host.  相似文献   

7.
The current consensus is that Microsporidia belong to a select group of parasites capable of causing both intersexuality and complete sex reversal in their hosts. Indeed, species such as Nosema granulosis and Dictyocoela duebenum, which infect amphipod crustaceans, are regularly referred to as 'feminising microsporidians'. This categorisation is based on a combination of findings: that these species are vertically transmitted and occur at a high prevalence of infection in intersex and female amphipods, that infected amphipod populations are female-biased, and that infected females have significantly female-biased broods with no concurrent increase in mortality. In this study, we report on a population of the amphipod Echinogammarus marinus presenting both female bias and high levels of intersexuality, which are infected with D. deubenum. In keeping with its feminising classification, infection is prevalent in animals presenting female and intersex phenotypes. However, a further screen revealed the presence of a previously unknown paramyxean parasite related to organisms of the genus Marteilia, a group known to cause catastrophic sexual dysfunction in bivalves. We found that the paramyxean parasite was also vertically transmitted, with infections being more prevalent in females and intersex animals. Critically, every animal infected with D. deubenum was also co-infected with the paramyxean, with few animals presenting an independent paramyxean infection. In contrast, co-infection of E. marinus with a paramyxean and the non-feminising microsporidian Dictyocoela berillonum rarely occurred. These observations raise a new hypothesis, namely, that D. duebenum and other feminising microsporidians are not actually capable of host feminisation but instead 'hitch-hike' together with a feminising paramyxean parasite.  相似文献   

8.
Amblyospora infections in Aedes stimulans are transovarially transmitted by females infected in the previous year. Pathogen development in progeny is dimorphic and host sex dependent. In males, the pathogen invades fat body tissue and undergoes an extensive developmental sequence which kills the host and results in the formation of eight haploid spores enclosed in an accessory membrane that are not infectious to other larvae. In females, the pathogen invades host oenocytes and undergoes a simple developmental sequence which has no detrimental affect on longevity, fecundity, oviposition, or egg hatch, and results in the formation of binucleated spores that infect the ovaries and ensure transmission to the next generation. Transovarial transmission is continuous and is the major way in which these microsporidia are maintained from year to year, but is incapable of maintaining infections in breeding populations because of low transmission rates and is not sufficient to account for the types and levels of infection observed in the field. Horizontal transmission is reported for the first time. It occurs sporadically during the early stages of larval subsequently disseminated to oenocytes of adult hosts and are transovarially transmitted by females to filial host generations. This pathway of transmission provides the necessary mechanism whereby these microsporidia can reenter the mosquito population and thus perpetuate themselves.  相似文献   

9.
The amphipod Gammarus duebeni is host to the feminising microsporidian parasite Nosema granulosis that converts males into functional females. To test the hypothesis that the parasite acts through endocrine disruption we compared the morphology of the gonad and activity of the androgenic gland, which coordinates male sexual differentiation, in infected and uninfected animals. Male gonad consisted of testis, seminal vesicle and vas deferens that was anchored to the genital papilla on segment 7. The androgenic gland was associated with the distal end of the vas deferens. In female and intersex animals the bi-lobed ovary opened into the oviduct at segment 5, vestigial vas deferens and vestigial androgenic gland were retained. The majority of parasitised individuals (38/39) were either phenotypic females or intersexes with fully developed ovaries and an undifferentiated androgenic gland. Our data suggest that the parasite prevents differentiation of the androgenic gland. In further support of this hypothesis, mass spectrometry of a single androgenic gland from males revealed a dominant molecular ion with a mass/charge ratio of 4818.4+H, corresponding to a peptide of androgenic gland hormone from Armadillidium vulgare. In contrast the vestigial androgenic gland from parasitised and unparasitised females showed only low intensity peaks. Our observations demonstrate that the parasite manipulates host sex by preventing androgenic gland differentiation, androgenic gland hormone production and consequently male differentiation. This is in agreement with observations of A. vulgare with inherited Wolbachia infection, suggesting that phylogenetically distant feminisers manipulate hosts through a common mechanism. The high frequency of infection in intersexes (89.3%) suggests that this phenotype results from incomplete feminisation by the parasite.  相似文献   

10.
Parasitism is known to be an important factor in determining the success of biological invasions. Here we examine Crangonyx pseudogracilis, a North American amphipod invasive in the United Kingdom and describe a novel microsporidium, Fibrillanosema crangonycis n.sp., n.g. The primary site of infection is the female gonad and the parasite is transovarially transmitted to the eggs. PCR screening reveals a female bias in the distribution of parasites (96.6% of females, N=29; 22.2% of males, N=27), which is indicative of host sex ratio distortion. The morphological and molecular characterisations of this new microsporidium place it outside all currently established genera. On the basis of these differences, we erect the new genus Fibrillanosema n.g. While F. crangonycis is morphologically identical to uncharacterised microsporidia from populations of North American amphipods, it is distinct from microsporidia found in European populations of amphipods. These data support the hypothesis that vertically transmitted parasites may be selectively retained during invasion events. Furthermore where vertical transmission is combined with host sex ratio distortion these parasites may directly enhance host invasion success through increased rates of population growth.  相似文献   

11.
Competition between parasites within a host can influence the evolution of parasite virulence and host resistance, but few studies examine the effects of unrelated parasites with conflicting transmission strategies infecting the same host. Vertically transmitted (VT) parasites, transmitted from mother to offspring, are in conflict with virulent, horizontally transmitted (HT) parasites, because healthy hosts are necessary to maximize VT parasite fitness. Resolution of the conflict between these parasites should lead to the evolution of one of two strategies: avoidance, or sabotage of HT parasite virulence by the VT parasite. We investigated two co-infecting parasites in the amphipod host, Gammarus roeseli: VT microsporidia have little effect on host fitness, but acanthocephala modify host behaviour, increasing the probability that the amphipod is predated by the acanthocephalan's definitive host. We found evidence for sabotage: the behavioural manipulation induced by the Acanthocephala Polymorphus minutus was weaker in hosts also infected by the microsporidia Dictyocoela sp. (roeselum) compared to hosts infected by P. minutus alone. Such conflicts may explain a significant portion of the variation generally observed in behavioural measures, and since VT parasites are ubiquitous in invertebrates, often passing undetected, conflict via transmission may be of great importance in the study of host-parasite relationships.  相似文献   

12.
Laboratory observations were made of the microsporidian parasite Amblyospora dyxenoides in its natural mosquito host, Culex annulirostris. There were no differences in the numbers of eggs laid and in the proportions which hatched between infected and uninfected females, indicating that the parasite did not affect fecundity. Unlike other species of Amblyospora which have been studied the development of binucleate spores in adult mosquitoes increase with age of the host in both sexes and in females it proceeds independently of egg development and blood feeding. The same trend is apparent for adult mosquitoes which acquired the infection in the larval stage by horizontal transmission from the intermediate copepod host as well as for mosquitoes which acquired oenocytic infections by transovarial transmission. There was considerable variation in the proportion of mosquitoes which became infected after exposure to A. dyxenoides infected copepods. Infections in larval progeny of female mosquitoes infected via spores produced in copepods ranged from 0 to 100% in individual batches and averaged 45.6% with meiospore infections, 19.3% with oenocytic infections, with the remaining 35.7% being uninfected. Similar variability was observed in the progeny of infected female mosquitoes in the second generation after exposure to infected copepods. During experiments in which the microsporidium was maintained in C. annulirostris through 9 successive transovarially transmitted cycles (by selectively rearing the progeny of females infected with binucleate spores after an initial exposure to infected copepods) the proportion of infected progeny with oenocytic infections increased from 25 to around 50% whereas the incidence of meiospore infections declined from 50 to 10%.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
Parasites often produce large numbers of offspring within their hosts. High parasite burdens are thought to be important for parasite transmission, but can also lower host fitness. We studied the protozoan Ophryocystis elektroscirrha, a common parasite of monarch butterflies (Danaus plexippus), to quantify the benefits of high parasite burdens for parasite transmission. This parasite is transmitted vertically when females scatter spores onto eggs and host plant leaves during oviposition; spores can also be transmitted between mating adults. Monarch larvae were experimentally infected and emerging adult females were mated and monitored in individual outdoor field cages. We provided females with fresh host plant material daily and quantified their lifespan and lifetime fecundity. Parasite transmission was measured by counting the numbers of parasite spores transferred to eggs and host plant leaves. We also quantified spores transferred from infected females to their mating partners. Infected monarchs had shorter lifespans and lower lifetime fecundity than uninfected monarchs. Among infected females, those with higher parasite loads transmitted more parasite spores to their eggs and to host plant leaves. There was also a trend for females with greater parasite loads to transmit more spores to their mating partners. These results demonstrate that high parasite loads on infected butterflies confer a strong fitness advantage to the parasite by increasing between-host transmission.  相似文献   

14.
We investigated vertical and horizontal transmission as means by which entomopathogenic microsporidia may be isolated in their hosts. Ostrinia nubilalis larvae were challenged with microsporidia isolated from other stalk-boring and row crop Lepidoptera and were susceptible to seven species. Two species were horizontally transmitted. A Nosema sp. from Eoreuma loftini was transmitted among O. nubilalis larvae but not among larvae of the E. loftini host. This species was also vertically transmitted to the offspring of infected O. nubilalis females. An rDNA sequence showed the E. loftini isolate to be Nosema pyrausta, a naturally occurring species in O. nubilalis. Our results suggest that both horizontal and vertical transmission provide physiological barriers to host switching in the microsporidia, thus restricting the natural host range.  相似文献   

15.
Diapausing embryos of Malacosoma americanum, the eastern tent caterpillar, collected in Kentucky were infected by a microsporidan. Of the egg masses sampled from several central Kentucky counties during 1972–1973, 56–90% of the egg masses contained infected embryos. Studies on the life cycle demonstrated that this microsporidan belongs in the genus Nosema. The M. americanum egg masses, embryos, larvae, and adults were paraffin-sectioned to reveal host-pathogen relationships. Frozen sections were also prepared from certain eggs dissected from infected virgin females. These studies demonstrated that the Nosema sp. is transovarially transmitted. Two phases in the infection process were noted in the pre- and postdiapausing embryos. The first phase (prediapause) involved light infections in midgut, hypodermis, and fat body which were manifest at embryonic tissue differentiation. The second phase (postdiapause) of the infection process occurred after the termination of host diapause. General infections intensified within larvae after hatch. Variation in the intensity of infections among individuals from the same colony suggests that sublethally infected individuals assure the prepetuation of Nosema sp. infections in subsequent generations via transovarial transmission.  相似文献   

16.
Recent work has suggested that the outcomes of host–symbiont interactions can shift between positive, neutral and negative depending on both biotic and abiotic conditions. Even organisms traditionally defined as parasites can have positive effects on hosts under some conditions. For a given host–parasite system, the effects of infection on host fitness can depend on host vigour, route of transmission and environmental conditions. We monitored sublethal microsporidian infections in populations of Gammarus pseudolimnaeus (Amphipoda: Gammaridae) from four cool water streams in southwestern Michigan, USA. Our objectives were to: (i) infer the mechanism of transmission (horizontal, vertical or mixed) from observed effects of infection on host fitness, (ii) determine if the magnitude of the effects on host fitness is a function of parasite load (infection intensity) compared with simple presence or absence of infection, and (iii) determine if there is variation in parasite effects on host fitness in isolated populations. PCR and DNA sequence analyses revealed that there were two microsporidia present among the four host populations: Dictyocoela sp. and Microsporidium sp. PCR screening of a subset of infected hosts showed that Dictyocoela sp. accounted for 90% of infections and was present in all four G. pseudolimnaeus populations, while Microsporidium sp. was found in two populations but was only relatively common in one. We found very low prevalence in males (∼5%), but high prevalence in females (range: 37–85%). Female fitness was positively associated with infection in two streams, resulting from either higher fecundity or more reproductive bouts. Infection had a negative effect on the number of reproductive bouts in a third population, and no effect on fecundity in a fourth population. Infection intensity explained additional variation in fecundity in one population; females with intermediate infection intensity had higher fecundity than females with either light or heavy infection intensity. Given the high prevalence of infection in females compared with males and the generally weak negative fitness effects coupled with some positive fitness effects, it is likely that both Dictyocoela sp. and Microsporidium sp. are primarily vertically transmitted, feminizing microsporidia. Our results suggest that microsporidian effects on G. pseudolimnaeus fitness were context-dependent and varied with host sex and local environment.  相似文献   

17.
In many insect species, males infected with microbes related to Wolbachia pipientis are “incompatible” with uninfected females. Crosses between infected males and uninfected females produce significantly fewer adult progeny than the other three possible crosses. The incompatibility-inducing microbes are usually maternally transmitted. Thus, incompatibility tends to confer a reproductive advantage on infected females in polymorphic populations, allowing these infections to spread. This paper analyzes selection on parasite and host genes that affect such incompatibility systems. Selection among parasite variants does not act directly on the level of incompatibility with uninfected females. In fact, selection favors rare parasite variants that increase the production of infected progeny by infected mothers, even if these variants reduce incompatibility with uninfected females. However, productivity-reducing parasites that cause partial incompatibility with hosts harboring alternative variants can be favored once they become sufficiently abundant locally. Thus, they may spread spatially by a process analogous to the spread of underdominant chromosome rearrangements. The dynamics of modifier alleles in the host are more difficult to predict, because such alleles will occur in both infected and uninfected individuals. Nevertheless, the relative fecundity of infected females compared to uninfected females, the efficiency of maternal transmission and the mutual compatibility of infected individuals all tend to increase under within-population selection on both host and parasite genes. In addition, selection on host genes favors increased compatibility between infected males and uninfected females. Although vertical transmission tends to harmonize host and parasite evolution, competition among parasite variants will tend to maintain incompatibility.  相似文献   

18.
The epizootiology of the microsporidium Amblyospora stimuli was studied in natural populations of a univoltine mosquito, Aedes stimulans, inhabiting a temporary vernal pool over an 18-year period. The yearly prevalence of benign oenocytic infections in adult females was variable, ranging from 1.0 to 9.6% (mean = 5.1%). The yearly prevalence of transovarially transmitted meiospore infections in larval populations was consistently lower but less variable, ranging from 1.3 to 5.9% (mean = 3.5%). Meiospore infections in F(1)-generation larvae were significantly correlated with infections in parental-generation females, thus suggesting that larval infection rates could be substantially increased if methods were available to facilitate transmission of A. stimuli to a larger portion of the female population via inundative or inoculative release of infected copepods. No correlation was found when infections in filial-generation adult females were measured against meiospore infections in larvae from the preceding year. Analysis of yearly prevalence data using Fine's Fundamental Vertical Transmission Equation revealed low rates of horizontal transmission from the intermediate copepod host to female larvae in most years, ranging from 0.1 to 8.7% (mean = 3.1%). A. stimuli is enzootic, persists at a very low level, and has minimal impact on Ae. stimulans populations at this site. The low incidence rate of horizontal transmission to larvae appears to be due largely to a paucity of copepods and is a major factor that limits the abundance and subsequent proliferation of A. stimuli in Ae. stimulans populations at this locale. Results support the view that host-parasite cospeciation is an important mechanism of evolution in this group of mosquito/copepod microsporidia.  相似文献   

19.
In its freshwater amphipod host Gammarus duebeni celticus, the microsporidian parasite Pleistophora mulleri showed 23% transmission efficiency when uninfected individuals were fed infected tissue, but 0% transmission by water-borne and coprophagous routes. Cannibalism between unparasitised and parasitised individuals was significantly in favour of the former (37% compared to 0%). In addition, cannibalism between parasitised individuals was significantly higher than between unparasitised individuals (27% compared to 0%). Thus, parasitised individuals were more likely to be cannibalised by both unparasitised and parasitised individuals. We discuss the conflicting selective forces within this host/parasite relationship, the implications of parasite mediated cannibalism for host population structure and the impacts this may have on the wider aquatic community.  相似文献   

20.
We investigated the effects of temperature on transovarial transmission and feminisation by Nosema granulosis, a microsporidian sex ratio distorter of the brackish water amphipod Gammarus duebeni. There was no difference in parasite transmission efficiency to the F(1) eggs of infected females maintained under two temperature conditions, 5 and 10 degrees C (89 and 86%, respectively). When F(1) individuals were screened as adults, the proportion infected was also similar at both temperatures (74 and 75%, respectively). However, transmission to the eggs of the F(2) generation was significantly reduced at low temperatures (61% at 5 degrees C and 91% at 10 degrees C). In addition, feminisation efficiency was reduced substantially at low temperatures; at 10 degrees C, a calculated 85% of infected males were feminised, but at 5 degrees C only 49% were feminised. This is the first evidence for incomplete feminisation and temperature-dependent transmission and feminisation by this sex ratio distorter. We examine the consequences for parasite spread and maintenance in natural populations using a model to predict parasite prevalence in large populations. Reduced feminisation at low temperatures impedes the spread of the parasite so that it attains a substantially lower frequency, or may even be excluded, from host populations.  相似文献   

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