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Host preference of field-derived Schistosoma mansoni is influenced by snail host compatibility and infection status

Schistosome parasites cause a chronic inflammatory disease in humans, and recent studies have emphasized the importance of control programs for understanding the aquatic phases of schistosomiasis transmission. The host-seeking behavior of larval schistosomes (miracidia) for their snail intermediate...

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Autores principales: Laidemitt, Martina R., Gleichsner, Alyssa M., Ingram, Christopher D., Gay, Steven D., Reinhart, Elizabeth M., Mutuku, Martin W., Oraro, Polycup O, Minchella, Dennis J., Mkoji, Gerald M., Loker, Eric S., Steinauer, Michelle L.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9592064/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36285193
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.4004
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author Laidemitt, Martina R.
Gleichsner, Alyssa M.
Ingram, Christopher D.
Gay, Steven D.
Reinhart, Elizabeth M.
Mutuku, Martin W.
Oraro, Polycup O
Minchella, Dennis J.
Mkoji, Gerald M.
Loker, Eric S.
Steinauer, Michelle L.
author_facet Laidemitt, Martina R.
Gleichsner, Alyssa M.
Ingram, Christopher D.
Gay, Steven D.
Reinhart, Elizabeth M.
Mutuku, Martin W.
Oraro, Polycup O
Minchella, Dennis J.
Mkoji, Gerald M.
Loker, Eric S.
Steinauer, Michelle L.
author_sort Laidemitt, Martina R.
collection PubMed
description Schistosome parasites cause a chronic inflammatory disease in humans, and recent studies have emphasized the importance of control programs for understanding the aquatic phases of schistosomiasis transmission. The host-seeking behavior of larval schistosomes (miracidia) for their snail intermediate hosts plays a critical role in parasite transmission. Using field-derived strains of Kenyan snails and parasites, we tested two main hypotheses: (1) Parasites prefer the most compatible host, and (2) parasites avoid hosts that are already infected. We tested preference to three Biomphalaria host snail taxa (B. pfeifferi, B. sudanica, and B. choanomphala), using allopatric and sympatric Schistosoma mansoni isolates and two different nonhost snail species that co-occur with Biomphalaria, Bulinus globosus, and Physa acuta. We also tested whether schistosomes avoid snail hosts that are already infected by another trematode species and whether competitive dominance played a role in their behavior. Preference was assessed using two-way choice chambers and by visually counting parasites that moved toward competing stimuli. In pairwise comparisons, we found that S. mansoni did not always prefer the more compatible snail taxon, but never favored an incompatible host over a compatible host. While parasites preferred B. pfeifferi to the nonhost species B. globosus, they did not significantly prefer B. pfeifferi versus P. acuta, an introduced species in Kenya. Finally, we demonstrated that parasites avoid infected snails if the resident parasite was competitively dominant (Patagifer sp.), and preferred snails infected with subordinates (xiphidiocercariae) to uninfected snails. These results provide evidence of “fine tuning” in the ability of schistosome miracidia to detect hosts; however, they did not always select hosts that would maximize fitness. Appreciating such discriminatory abilities could lead to a better understanding of how ecosystem host and parasite diversity influences disease transmission and could provide novel control mechanisms to improve human health.
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spelling pubmed-95920642022-10-24 Host preference of field-derived Schistosoma mansoni is influenced by snail host compatibility and infection status Laidemitt, Martina R. Gleichsner, Alyssa M. Ingram, Christopher D. Gay, Steven D. Reinhart, Elizabeth M. Mutuku, Martin W. Oraro, Polycup O Minchella, Dennis J. Mkoji, Gerald M. Loker, Eric S. Steinauer, Michelle L. Ecosphere Article Schistosome parasites cause a chronic inflammatory disease in humans, and recent studies have emphasized the importance of control programs for understanding the aquatic phases of schistosomiasis transmission. The host-seeking behavior of larval schistosomes (miracidia) for their snail intermediate hosts plays a critical role in parasite transmission. Using field-derived strains of Kenyan snails and parasites, we tested two main hypotheses: (1) Parasites prefer the most compatible host, and (2) parasites avoid hosts that are already infected. We tested preference to three Biomphalaria host snail taxa (B. pfeifferi, B. sudanica, and B. choanomphala), using allopatric and sympatric Schistosoma mansoni isolates and two different nonhost snail species that co-occur with Biomphalaria, Bulinus globosus, and Physa acuta. We also tested whether schistosomes avoid snail hosts that are already infected by another trematode species and whether competitive dominance played a role in their behavior. Preference was assessed using two-way choice chambers and by visually counting parasites that moved toward competing stimuli. In pairwise comparisons, we found that S. mansoni did not always prefer the more compatible snail taxon, but never favored an incompatible host over a compatible host. While parasites preferred B. pfeifferi to the nonhost species B. globosus, they did not significantly prefer B. pfeifferi versus P. acuta, an introduced species in Kenya. Finally, we demonstrated that parasites avoid infected snails if the resident parasite was competitively dominant (Patagifer sp.), and preferred snails infected with subordinates (xiphidiocercariae) to uninfected snails. These results provide evidence of “fine tuning” in the ability of schistosome miracidia to detect hosts; however, they did not always select hosts that would maximize fitness. Appreciating such discriminatory abilities could lead to a better understanding of how ecosystem host and parasite diversity influences disease transmission and could provide novel control mechanisms to improve human health. 2022-04 2022-04-08 /pmc/articles/PMC9592064/ /pubmed/36285193 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.4004 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Article
Laidemitt, Martina R.
Gleichsner, Alyssa M.
Ingram, Christopher D.
Gay, Steven D.
Reinhart, Elizabeth M.
Mutuku, Martin W.
Oraro, Polycup O
Minchella, Dennis J.
Mkoji, Gerald M.
Loker, Eric S.
Steinauer, Michelle L.
Host preference of field-derived Schistosoma mansoni is influenced by snail host compatibility and infection status
title Host preference of field-derived Schistosoma mansoni is influenced by snail host compatibility and infection status
title_full Host preference of field-derived Schistosoma mansoni is influenced by snail host compatibility and infection status
title_fullStr Host preference of field-derived Schistosoma mansoni is influenced by snail host compatibility and infection status
title_full_unstemmed Host preference of field-derived Schistosoma mansoni is influenced by snail host compatibility and infection status
title_short Host preference of field-derived Schistosoma mansoni is influenced by snail host compatibility and infection status
title_sort host preference of field-derived schistosoma mansoni is influenced by snail host compatibility and infection status
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9592064/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36285193
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.4004
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