Variation in host susceptibility and infectiousness generated by co-infection: the myxoma–Trichostrongylus retortaeformiscase in wild rabbits
Open Access
- 19 June 2007
- journal article
- research article
- Published by The Royal Society in Journal of The Royal Society Interface
- Vol. 4 (16) , 831-840
- https://doi.org/10.1098/rsif.2007.1075
Abstract
One of the conditions that can affect host susceptibility and parasite transmission is the occurrence of concomitant infections. Parasites interact directly or indirectly within an individual host and often these interactions are modulated by the host immune response. We used a free-living rabbit population co-infected with the nematodeTrichostrongylus retortaeformis, which appears to stimulate an acquired immune response, and the immunosuppressive poxvirus myxoma. Modelling was used to examine how myxoma infection alters the immune-mediated establishment and death/expulsion ofT. retortaeformis, and consequently affects parasite intensity and duration of the infection. Simulations were based on the general TH1–TH2 immunological paradigm that proposes the polarization of the host immune response towards one of the two subsets of T helper cells. Our findings suggest that myxoma infections contribute to alter host susceptibility to the nematode, as co-infected rabbits showed higher worm intensity compared with virus negative hosts. Results also suggest that myxoma disrupts the ability of the host to clearT. retortaeformisas worm intensities were consistently high and remained high in old rabbits. However, the co-infection model has to include some immune-mediated nematode regulation to be consistent with field data, indicating that the TH1–TH2 dichotomy is not complete. We conclude that seasonal myxoma outbreaks enhance host susceptibility to the nematode and generate highly infected hosts that remain infectious for a longer time. Finally, the virus–nematode co-infection increases heterogeneities among individuals and potentially has a large effect on parasite transmission.Keywords
This publication has 60 references indexed in Scilit:
- Intestinal helminth co-infection has a negative impact on both anti-Mycobacterium tuberculosis immunity and clinical response to tuberculosis therapyClinical and Experimental Immunology, 2006
- HIV and helminth co‐infection: is deworming necessary?Parasite Immunology, 2006
- Role of HCV Coinfection Towards Disease Progression and Survival in HIV-1 Infected Children: A Follow-Up Study of 10 YearsJournal of Tropical Pediatrics, 2005
- Helminth parasites – masters of regulationImmunological Reviews, 2004
- Competition and coexistence in host‐parasite systems: the myxomatosis casePopulation Ecology, 2004
- Immune Regulation by helminth parasites: cellular and molecular mechanismsNature Reviews Immunology, 2003
- Life cycle ofTrichostrongylus retortaeformisin its natural host, the rabbit (Oryctolagus cuniculus)Journal of Helminthology, 2002
- WITHIN-HOST POPULATION DYNAMICS AND THE EVOLUTION OF MICROPARASITES IN A HETEROGENEOUS HOST POPULATIONEvolution, 2002
- Parasite immunity: Pathways for expelling intestinal helminthsCurrent Biology, 1998
- The ecology of immature phases of Trichostrongyle nematodes: II. The effect of climatic factors on the availability of the infective larvae of Trichostrongylus retortaeformis to the hostParasitology, 1948