Host-Parasite Relations in a Mycoparasite. VIII. Age-Related Host Resistance inChoanephora Cucurbitarum

Mycologia ◽  
1983 ◽  
Vol 75 (4) ◽  
pp. 588-596
Author(s):  
M. S. Manocha ◽  
C. D. Campbell
Author(s):  
Vasiliki Boulaki ◽  
Dimitrios Vlachakis ◽  
Smaragda Sotiraki ◽  
Sophia Kossida

Piglet isosporosis caused by Isospora suis represents a considerable problem worldwide with great economic losses and veterinary importance in pig production. So the control of this parasite is a great need. However, little is known about porcine coccidiosis concerning dynamics, pathophysiology and immunology of this disease, as well as host-parasite interactions. In addition, only few studies deal with experimental modelling of this illness with parameters such as the excretion patterns and the age-related susceptibility. However, besides natural I. suis infections occurring in pig farms, there are some experimental infections described that allow investigating accurately the course of infection. Experimental infections could contribute to a more effective control of these infections. In addition, managerial practices of farrowing facilities and piglet manipulations can contribute to this purpose. So, the description of hygiene measures, the appropriate management of farrowing facilities and piglet manipulations, as well as appropriate farm-specific environment, comprising appropriate design and materials of the farrowing pen and enough room, could diminish the occurrence and transmission of this parasite. However, unfortunately there are only very few reports documenting all this subjects that are so important for the effective control of this disease.


1994 ◽  
Vol 346 (1317) ◽  
pp. 283-293 ◽  

Genetic specificity occurs in many host-parasite systems. Each host can recognize and resist only a subset of parasites; each parasite can grow only on particular hosts. Biochemical recognition systems determine which matching host and parasite genotypes result in resistance or disease. Recognition systems are often associated with widespread genetic polymorphism in the host and parasite populations. I describe four systems with matching host—parasite polymorphisms: plant-pathogen interactions, nuclear—cytoplasmic conflict in plants, restriction enzymes in bacterial defence against viruses, and bacterial plasmids that compete by toxin production and toxin immunity. These systems highlight several inductive problems. For example, the observed patterns of resistance and susceptibility between samples of hosts and parasites are often used to study polymorphism. The detectable polymorphism by this method may be a poor guide to the actual polymorphism and to the underlying biochemistry of host-parasite recognition. The problem of using detectable polymorphism to infer the true nature of recognition and polymorphism is exacerbated by non-equilibrium fluctuations in allele frequencies that commonly occur in host-parasite systems. Another problem is that different matching systems may lead either to low frequencies of host resistance and common parasites, or to common resistance and rare parasites. Thus low levels of host resistance or rare parasites do not imply that parasitism is an unimportant evolutionary force on host diversity. Knowledge of biochemical recognition systems and dynamical analysis of models provide a framework for analysing the widespread polymorphisms in host-parasite genetics.


Author(s):  
Lauren Fuess ◽  
Jesse N. Weber ◽  
Stijn den Haan ◽  
Natalie C. Steinel ◽  
Kum Chuan Shim ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTDespite the significant effect of host-parasite interactions on both ecological systems and organism health, there is still limited understanding of the mechanisms driving evolution of host resistance to parasites. One model of rapid evolution, the Baldwin Effect, describes the role of plasticity in adaptation to novel conditions, and subsequent canalization of associated traits. While mostly applied in the context of environmental conditions, this theory may be relevant to the evolution of host resistance to novel parasites. Here we test the applicability of the Baldwin Effect to the evolution of resistance in a natural system using threespine stickleback fish (Gasterosteus aculeatus) and their cestode parasite Schistochephalus solidus. We leverage a large transcriptomic data set to describe the response to S. solidus infection by three different genetic crosses of stickleback, from a resistant and a tolerant population. Hosts mount a multigenic response to the parasite that is similar among host genotypes. In addition, we document extensive constitutive variation in gene expression among host genotypes. However, although many genes are both infection-induced and differentially expressed between genotypes, this overlap is not more extensive than expected by chance. We also see little evidence of canalization of infection-induced gene expression in the derived resistant population. These patterns do not support the Baldwin Effect, though they illustrate the importance of variation in both constitutive expression and induced responses to parasites. Finally, our results improve understanding of the cellular mechanisms underlying a putative resistance phenotype (fibrosis). Combined, our results highlight the importance of both constitutive and inducible variation in the evolution of resistance to parasites, and identify new target genes contributing to fibrosis. These findings advance understanding of host-parasite interactions and co-evolutionary relationships in natural systems.


Heredity ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 125 (4) ◽  
pp. 173-183
Author(s):  
Gilberto Bento ◽  
Peter D. Fields ◽  
David Duneau ◽  
Dieter Ebert

Abstract To understand the mechanisms of antagonistic coevolution, it is crucial to identify the genetics of parasite resistance. In the Daphnia magna–Pasteuria ramosa host–parasite system, the most important step of the infection process is the one in which P. ramosa spores attach to the host’s foregut. A matching-allele model (MAM) describes the host–parasite genetic interactions underlying attachment success. Here we describe a new P. ramosa genotype, P15, which, unlike previously studied genotypes, attaches to the host’s hindgut, not to its foregut. Host resistance to P15 attachment shows great diversity across natural populations. In contrast to P. ramosa genotypes that use foregut attachment, P15 shows some quantitative variation in attachment success and does not always lead to successful infections, suggesting that hindgut attachment represents a less-efficient infection mechanism than foregut attachment. Using a Quantitative Trait Locus (QTL) approach, we detect two significant QTLs in the host genome: one that co-localizes with the previously described D. magna PR locus of resistance to foregut attachment, and a second, major QTL located in an unlinked genomic region. We find no evidence of epistasis. Fine mapping reveals a genomic region, the D locus, of ~13 kb. The discovery of a second P. ramosa attachment site and of a novel host-resistance locus increases the complexity of this system, with implications for both for the coevolutionary dynamics (e.g., Red Queen and the role of recombination), and for the evolution and epidemiology of the infection process.


1973 ◽  
Vol 59 (1) ◽  
pp. 117 ◽  
Author(s):  
Donald L. Wassom ◽  
Vance M. Guss ◽  
Albert W. Grundmann

mSystems ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 2 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Nolwenn M. Dheilly ◽  
Daniel Bolnick ◽  
Seth Bordenstein ◽  
Paul J. Brindley ◽  
Cédric Figuères ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Understanding how microbiomes affect host resistance, parasite virulence, and parasite-associated diseases requires a collaborative effort between parasitologists, microbial ecologists, virologists, and immunologists. We hereby propose the Parasite Microbiome Project to bring together researchers with complementary expertise and to study the role of microbes in host-parasite interactions. Understanding how microbiomes affect host resistance, parasite virulence, and parasite-associated diseases requires a collaborative effort between parasitologists, microbial ecologists, virologists, and immunologists. We hereby propose the Parasite Microbiome Project to bring together researchers with complementary expertise and to study the role of microbes in host-parasite interactions. Data from the Parasite Microbiome Project will help identify the mechanisms driving microbiome variation in parasites and infected hosts and how that variation is associated with the ecology and evolution of parasites and their disease outcomes. This is a call to arms to prevent fragmented research endeavors, encourage best practices in experimental approaches, and allow reliable comparative analyses across model systems. It is also an invitation to foundations and national funding agencies to propel the field of parasitology into the microbiome/metagenomic era.


1973 ◽  
Vol 51 (2) ◽  
pp. 273-279 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eugene M. Liburd

Some of the host–parasite interrelationships between Eimeria nieschulzi (Protozoa: Sporozoa) and inbred and outbred strains of rats, were analyzed. The sex of the host did not influence the severity of infection; however, starved rats as compared with fed ones produced significantly lower numbers of oocysts during an infection. Mechanical crushing of infected faeces yielded a significantly higher number of oocysts than those crushed manually. The reproductive potential of the parasite varied inversely with the dosage of oocysts. Infections were caused by parenteral injections of sporozoites through four routes. In every case these inoculations caused milder infections than those elicited by similar doses of oocysts or sporozoites given orally. All infections stimulated resistance in rats; the intensity of this immunity was dose dependent. Single doses of 2500 and 3500 oocysts or more induced total resistance in outbred and inbred rats, respectively. This immunity was demonstrated 15 days after inoculation, by challenge infections. No developing stages were found in the intestinal tissues of rats which were immunized and then challenged.


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