Affiliation:
1. Institutes of Evolution, Immunology and Infection Research, School of Biological Sciences, Ashworth Laboratories, University of EdinburghEdinburgh EH9 3JTUK
2. School of Biological and Environmental Sciences, University of StirlingStirling FK9 4LAUK
Abstract
Malaria and other haemosporin parasites must undergo a round of sexual reproduction in their insect vector in order to produce stages that can be transmitted to vertebrate hosts. Consequently, it is crucial that parasites produce the sex ratio (proportion of male sexual stages) that will maximize the number of fertilizations and thus, transmission to new vertebrate hosts. There is some evidence to show that, consistent with evolutionary theory, the sex ratios of malaria parasites are negatively correlated to their inbreeding rate. However, recent theory has shown that when fertilization success is compromised, parasites should respond by increasing their investment in sexual stages or by producing a less female biased sex ratio than predicted by their inbreeding rate alone. Here, we show that two species of rodent malaria,
Plasmodium chabaudi
and
Plasmodium vinckei petteri
, adopt different strategies in response to host anaemia, a factor thought to compromise transmission success:
P. chabaudi
increases investment in sexual stages, whereas
P. vinckei
produces a less female biased sex ratio. We suggest that these different transmission strategies may be due to marked species differences in host cell preference.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine
Cited by
50 articles.
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