Covert infections as a mechanism for long-term persistence of baculoviruses

被引:82
作者
Burden, JP
Nixon, CP
Hodgkinson, AE
Possee, RD
Sait, SM
King, LA
Hails, RS
机构
[1] NERC, Ctr Ecol & Hydrol, Oxford OX1 3SR, England
[2] Oxford Brookes Univ, Sch Biol & Mol Sci, Oxford OX3 0BP, England
[3] Univ Leeds, Ctr Biodivers & Conservat, Sch Biol, Leeds LS2 9JT, W Yorkshire, England
关键词
asymptomatic infections; insect-pathogen interactions; Mamestra brassicae nucleopolyhedrovirus; persistence; vertical transmission;
D O I
10.1046/j.1461-0248.2003.00459.x
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
The prevalence of pathogens in wild populations has often been estimated by the appearance of overt symptoms in the host, and this is typically used as the sole gauge of the impact of the pathogen on host dynamics. However, the development of molecular methods has increased the sensitivity with which we can detect asymptomatic infections. Baculoviruses are insect pathogens that, like many microparasites, are usually only found when their hosts reach outbreak densities, when a disease epizootic occurs. Conventional wisdom is that the long-term persistence of baculoviruses relies on their survival in the external environment in the form of occlusion bodies. These are proteinaceous matrices in which the virus particles are embedded, and which provide a degree of protection from UV irradiation. However, Mamestra brassicae has also been shown to harbour a persistent, non-lethal baculovirus infection (M. brassicae nucleopolyhedrovirus) in laboratory culture, which may represent another putative persistence mechanism. Here, we present evidence that such covert infections are also present and frequent in natural populations of the moth. The persistent infections were triggered into the lethal overt state by exposure to another baculovirus, and two closely related but different baculoviruses were subsequently identified as persistent infections within the populations sampled. These results have broad-ranging implications for our understanding of host pathogen interactions in the field, in the use of pathogens as biocontrol agents, and in the evolution of virulence.
引用
收藏
页码:524 / 531
页数:8
相关论文
共 39 条
[1]   THE POPULATION-DYNAMICS OF MICRO-PARASITES AND THEIR INVERTEBRATE HOSTS [J].
ANDERSON, RM ;
MAY, RM .
PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 1981, 291 (1054) :451-524
[2]   FIELD PERSISTENCE OF TRICHOPLUSIA-NI (LEPIDOPTERA, NOCTUIDAE) SINGLE-EMBEDDED NUCLEAR POLYHEDROSIS-VIRUS ON CABBAGE FOLIAGE [J].
BIEVER, KD ;
HOSTETTER, DL .
ENVIRONMENTAL ENTOMOLOGY, 1985, 14 (05) :579-581
[3]   A GAME-THEORETICAL MODEL OF PARASITE VIRULENCE [J].
BREMERMANN, HJ ;
PICKERING, J .
JOURNAL OF THEORETICAL BIOLOGY, 1983, 100 (03) :411-426
[4]   Vertical transmission of sublethal granulovirus infection in the Indian meal moth, Plodia interpunctella [J].
Burden, JP ;
Griffiths, CM ;
Cory, JS ;
Smith, P ;
Sait, SM .
MOLECULAR ECOLOGY, 2002, 11 (03) :547-555
[5]   CONSERVATION OF POLYHEDRIN GENE PROMOTER FUNCTION BETWEEN AUTOGRAPHA-CALIFORNICA AND MAMESTRA-BRASSICAE NUCLEAR POLYHEDROSIS VIRUSES [J].
CAMERON, IR ;
POSSEE, RD .
VIRUS RESEARCH, 1989, 12 (03) :183-199
[6]   RECOVERY OF PINE BEAUTY MOTH (PANOLIS-FLAMMEA) NUCLEAR POLYHEDROSIS-VIRUS FROM PINE FOLIAGE [J].
CARRUTHERS, WR ;
CORY, JS ;
ENTWISTLE, PF .
JOURNAL OF INVERTEBRATE PATHOLOGY, 1988, 52 (01) :27-32
[7]   A 2.9-kilobase noncoding nuclear RNA functions in the establishment of persistent Hz-1 viral infection [J].
Chao, YC ;
Lee, ST ;
Chang, MC ;
Chen, HH ;
Chen, SS ;
Wu, TY ;
Liu, FH ;
Hsu, EL ;
Hou, RF .
JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY, 1998, 72 (03) :2233-2245
[8]   CLONING OF THE LATENCY GENE AND THE EARLY PROTEIN-O GENE OF PSEUDORABIES VIRUS [J].
CHEUNG, AK .
JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY, 1991, 65 (10) :5260-5271
[9]   EPISOMAL AND INTEGRATED COPIES OF EPSTEIN-BARR-VIRUS COEXIST IN BURKITT-LYMPHOMA CELL-LINES [J].
DELECLUSE, HJ ;
BARTNIZKE, S ;
HAMMERSCHMIDT, W ;
BULLERDIEK, J ;
BORNKAMM, GW .
JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY, 1993, 67 (03) :1292-1299
[10]   EPIZOOTIOLOGY OF A NUCLEAR POLYHEDROSIS-VIRUS (BACULOVIRIDAE) IN EUROPEAN SPRUCE SAWFLY (GILPINIA-HERCYNIAE) - SPREAD OF DISEASE FROM SMALL EPICENTRES IN COMPARISON WITH SPREAD OF BACULOVIRUS DISEASES IN OTHER HOSTS [J].
ENTWISTLE, PF ;
ADAMS, PHW ;
EVANS, HF ;
RIVERS, CF .
JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECOLOGY, 1983, 20 (02) :473-487