Reconciling contrasting effects of nitrogen on host immunity and pathogen transmission using stoichiometric models

Author:

Van de Waal Dedmer B.12ORCID,White Lauren A.3,Everett Rebecca4,Asik Lale56,Borer Elizabeth T.7ORCID,Frenken Thijs18ORCID,González Angélica L.9,Paseka Rachel7,Seabloom Eric W.7ORCID,Strauss Alexander T.7101112ORCID,Peace Angela6

Affiliation:

1. Department of Aquatic Ecology Netherlands Institute of Ecology (NIOO‐KNAW) Wageningen The Netherlands

2. Department of Freshwater and Marine Ecology, Institute for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Dynamics University of Amsterdam Amsterdam The Netherlands

3. National Socio‐Environmental Synthesis Center (SESYNC) University of Maryland Annapolis Maryland USA

4. Department of Mathematics and Statistics Haverford College Haverford Pennsylvania USA

5. Department of Mathematics and Statistics University of the Incarnate Word San Antonio Texas USA

6. Department of Mathematics and Statistics Texas Tech University Lubbock Texas USA

7. Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Behavior University of Minnesota St. Paul Minnesota USA

8. Great Lakes Institute for Environmental Research (GLIER) University of Windsor Windsor Ontario Canada

9. Department of Biology and Center for Computational and Integrative Biology Rutgers University Camden New Jersey USA

10. Odum School of Ecology University of Georgia Athens Georgia USA

11. River Basin Center University of Georgia Athens Georgia USA

12. Center for the Ecology of Infectious Diseases University of Georgia Athens Georgia USA

Abstract

AbstractHosts rely on the availability of nutrients for growth, and for defense against pathogens. At the same time, changes in host nutrition can alter the dynamics of pathogens that rely on their host for reproduction. For primary producer hosts, enhanced nutrient loads may increase host biomass or pathogen reproduction, promoting faster density‐dependent pathogen transmission. However, the effect of elevated nutrients may be reduced if hosts allocate a growth‐limiting nutrient to pathogen defense. In canonical disease models, transmission is not a function of nutrient availability. Yet, including nutrient availability is necessary to mechanistically understand the response of infection to changes in the environment. Here, we explore the implications of nutrient‐mediated pathogen infectivity and host immunity on infection outcomes. We developed a stoichiometric disease model that explicitly integrates the contrasting dependencies of pathogen infectivity and host immunity on nitrogen (N) and parameterized it for an algal‐host system. Our findings reveal dynamic shifts in host biomass build‐up, pathogen prevalence, and the force of infection along N supply gradients with N‐mediated host infectivity and immunity, compared with a model in which the transmission rate was fixed. We show contrasting responses in pathogen performance with increasing N supply between N‐mediated infectivity and N‐mediated immunity, revealing an optimum for pathogen transmission at intermediate N supply. This was caused by N limitation of the pathogen at a low N supply and by pathogen suppression via enhanced host immunity at a high N supply. By integrating both nutrient‐mediated pathogen infectivity and host immunity into a stoichiometric model, we provide a theoretical framework that is a first step in reconciling the contrasting role nutrients can have on host–pathogen dynamics.

Funder

SESYNC

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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