Abstract
Pathogen interactions arising during coinfection can exacerbate disease severity, for example when the immune response mounted against one pathogen negatively affects defense of another. It is also possible that host immune responses to a pathogen, shaped by historical evolutionary interactions between host and pathogen, may modify host immune defenses in ways that have repercussions for other pathogens. In this case, negative interactions between two pathogens could emerge even in the absence of concurrent infection. Parasitic worms and tuberculosis (TB) are involved in one of the most geographically extensive of pathogen interactions, and during coinfection worms can exacerbate TB disease outcomes. Here, we show that in a wild mammal natural resistance to worms affects bovine tuberculosis (BTB) severity independently of active worm infection. We found that worm-resistant individuals were more likely to die of BTB than were nonresistant individuals, and their disease progressed more quickly. Anthelmintic treatment moderated, but did not eliminate, the resistance effect, and the effects of resistance and treatment were opposite and additive, with untreated, resistant individuals experiencing the highest mortality. Furthermore, resistance and anthelmintic treatment had nonoverlapping effects on BTB pathology. The effects of resistance manifested in the lungs (the primary site of BTB infection), while the effects of treatment manifested almost entirely in the lymph nodes (the site of disseminated disease), suggesting that resistance and active worm infection affect BTB progression via distinct mechanisms. Our findings reveal that interactions between pathogens can occur as a consequence of processes arising on very different timescales.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | e2015080118 |
| Journal | Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America |
| Volume | 118 |
| Issue number | 3 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - Jan 19 2021 |
Funding
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS. We thank South African National Parks (SANParks) for permission to conduct this study in Kruger and the entire SANParks Veterinary Wildlife Services Department for invaluable assistance with animal captures and project logistics. We thank R. Spaan, J. Spaan, K. Thompson, B. Beechler, E. Gorsich, P. Snyder, J. Alagappan, S. Amish, L. Austin, L. Megow, K. Raum, N. Rogers, and M. Smith for work on animal captures and sample processing. F. Quinn and P. Rohani provided valuable comments on the manuscript draft. This study was supported by the NSF (NSF DEB-1102493) and NIH (NIH 1R01GM131319) as part of the joint NSF/ NIH/US Department of Agriculture Ecology and Evolution of Infectious Diseases Grant Program.
| Funder number |
|---|
| DEB-1102493 |
| R01GM131319 |
Keywords
- African buffalo | coinfection | helminths | resistance | tuberculosis