| Literature DB >> 28845736 |
Sarah E Reece1,2, Kimberley F Prior1, Nicole Mideo3.
Abstract
Biological rhythms are thought to have evolved to enable organisms to organize their activities according to the earth's predictable cycles, but quantifying the fitness advantages of rhythms is challenging and data revealing their costs and benefits are scarce. More difficult still is explaining why parasites that live exclusively within the bodies of other organisms have biological rhythms. Rhythms exist in the development and traits of parasites, in host immune responses, and in disease susceptibility. This raises the possibility that timing matters for how hosts and parasites interact and, consequently, for the severity and transmission of diseases. Here, we take an evolutionary ecological perspective to examine why parasites exhibit biological rhythms and how their rhythms are regulated. Specifically, we examine the adaptive significance (evolutionary costs and benefits) of rhythms for parasites and explore to what extent interactions between hosts and parasites can drive rhythms in infections. That parasites with altered rhythms can evade the effects of control interventions underscores the urgent need to understand how and why parasites exhibit biological rhythms. Thus, we contend that examining the roles of biological rhythms in disease offers innovative approaches to improve health and opens up a new arena for studying host-parasite (and host-parasite-vector) coevolution.Entities:
Keywords: Plasmodium; adaptation; chronobiology; circadian rhythm; fitness; host-parasite interactions; life history; phenotypic plasticity; transmission
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28845736 PMCID: PMC5734377 DOI: 10.1177/0748730417718904
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biol Rhythms ISSN: 0748-7304 Impact factor: 3.182
Figure 1.Selection of the rhythmic factors (cogs) in the various environments that parasites experience during their lifecycles that are hypothesized to shape rhythms in parasite traits. Rhythmic factors within each environment are often correlated and can shape the rhythms of factors in other environments (dotted arrows). The complexity of the possible combinatorial interactions between rhythmic environmental factors and the diversity of parasite rhythms that can be affected poses an interdisciplinary challenge in regard to unravelling what drives parasite rhythms and their consequences for fitness.
Summary of the state of affairs on the evolutionary ecology of parasite rhythms.
| Parasite | Rhythm | Why? | How? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Size of lesions in host leaves | Counteract effects of host immune defenses | Oscillator entrainable by photoperiod and temperature | |
| Manipulation of host behavior | Match foraging activity of next host | Respond to temperature, not light | |
| Migration between anterior feeding and posterior egg-laying sites in gut | Maximize food intake/minimize homeostasis, or maximize infective dose | Actively respond to food in gut or digestive processes, or by-product of gut peristalsis | |
| Migration out of host anus or posterior gut to lay eggs | Enable larvae to mature in time to encounter host during activity | Respond to food appearing in gut or associated digestive processes | |
| Migration between anterior and posterior gut | As for trematodes | Respond to serotonin or gut peristalsis | |
| Shedding from host in feces | Minimize exposure to damage by UV light and low humidity, or maximize infective dose | Respond to temperature or diurnal variation in host foraging activity | |
| Metastrongyloid nematodes | Larval output in feces | Not known | By-product of rhythms in defecation |
| Development during asexual replication | Evade immune killing or exploit red blood cell resources. Maximize infectiousness to vector | Respond to melatonin, photoperiod, glucose, temperature, or scheduled by host’s rhythms | |
| Emergence from intermediate snail host | Coincide with activity pattern of next host species | Respond to photoperiod (proposed for related species) | |
| Egg shedding from definitive human host | Maximize deposition of eggs in habitat of next host species | Respond to host body temperature or locomotor activity | |
| Various freshwater trematode flukes | Emergence from intermediate snail host | Cope with rhythms in activity of next host, salinity/tides, UV light, predators, wrong host activity | Respond to photoperiod (proposed for related species) |
| Expression of metabolic genes | Cope with “metabolic rush” resulting from host foraging | Oscillator entrainable by temperature, not photoperiod | |
| Migration from lungs to peripheral circulation | Maximize availability to mosquito vectors | Respond to oxygen levels in blood |
For each parasite species, the table notes the rhythms that have been documented, hypotheses for how they might affect within-host survival and/or between-host transmission, and how rhythms are thought to be regulated. References are cited in the main text.
Figure 2.The migration of microfilariae from the lungs to the host’s peripheral circulation broadly coincides with the activity rhythms of their mosquito vector species. Red lines illustrate rhythms in the percentage of the maximum number of microfilariae observed in the peripheral blood of hosts, and the bars illustrate vector biting activity. (A) The nocturnally periodic form of Wuchereria bancrofti is transmitted by night-biting Anopheles and Culex, and (B) the diurnally subperiodic form is transmitted by day-biting Aedes. Coinciding migration with vector foraging is thought to maximize parasite transmission, the “Hawking hypothesis.” Adapted from Pichon and Treuil (2004).