Published January 25, 2019 | Version v1
Dataset Open

Data from: Timing of host feeding drives rhythms in parasite replication

  • 1. University of Edinburgh
  • 2. University of Surrey
  • 3. Stanford University
  • 4. King Abdullah University of Science and Technology

Description

Circadian rhythms enable organisms to synchronise the processes underpinning survival and reproduction to anticipate daily changes in the external environment. Recent work shows that daily (circadian) rhythms also enable parasites to maximise fitness in the context of ecological interactions with their hosts. Because parasite rhythms matter for their fitness, understanding how they are regulated could lead to innovative ways to reduce the severity and spread of diseases. Here, we examine how host circadian rhythms influence rhythms in the asexual replication of malaria parasites. Asexual replication is responsible for the severity of malaria and fuels transmission of the disease, yet, how parasite rhythms are driven remains a mystery. We perturbed feeding rhythms of hosts by 12 hours (i.e. diurnal feeding in nocturnal mice) to desynchronise the host's peripheral oscillators from the central, light-entrained oscillator in the brain and their rhythmic outputs. We demonstrate that the rhythms of rodent malaria parasites in day-fed hosts become inverted relative to the rhythms of parasites in night-fed hosts. Our results reveal that the host's peripheral rhythms (associated with the timing of feeding and metabolism), but not rhythms driven by the central, light-entrained circadian oscillator in the brain, determine the timing (phase) of parasite rhythms. Further investigation reveals that parasite rhythms correlate closely with blood glucose rhythms. In addition, we show that parasite rhythms resynchronise to the altered host feeding rhythms when food availability is shifted, which is not mediated through rhythms in the host immune system. Our observations suggest that parasites actively control their developmental rhythms. Finally, counter to expectation, the severity of disease symptoms expressed by hosts was not affected by desynchronisation of their central and peripheral rhythms. Our study at the intersection of disease ecology and chronobiology opens up a new arena for studying host-parasite-vector coevolution and has broad implications for applied bioscience.

Notes

Files

additional_virulence_parasite.csv

Files (6.5 MB)

Name Size Download all
md5:234f07033981c238cb65009abaa0f490
1.9 kB Preview Download
md5:addb42e91259c9c1ffb1c1c09b25cf49
1.3 kB Preview Download
md5:ce3adcde7f9dc55e989d6f9eff9c727b
6.4 MB Preview Download
md5:567f0b5085107c3bf4637b9a76f5ef50
4.5 kB Preview Download
md5:4bf891314316d2bd88365cc4fc44570d
34.6 kB Preview Download
md5:dd4820ae44c8226c6806fc51e0c0bc21
14.7 kB Preview Download
md5:2c4a7d41c3c0e6686c702a2d060ab6a0
15.9 kB Preview Download
md5:b1286756ea25fefc26a661c3ccd871c9
7.9 kB Preview Download
md5:0f7f64cfa63d37a1c65774c4a19121b7
1.5 kB Preview Download

Additional details

Related works