Repository logo
Log In
  1. Home
  2. Unibas
  3. Publications
  4. Responses of a bacterial pathogen to phosphorus limitation of its aquatic invertebrate host
 
  • Details

Responses of a bacterial pathogen to phosphorus limitation of its aquatic invertebrate host

Date Issued
2008-01-01
Author(s)
Frost, P. C.
Ebert, Dieter  
Smith, V. H.
DOI
10.1890/07-0389.1
Abstract
Host nutrition is thought to affect the establishment, persistence, and severity of pathogenic infections. Nutrient-deficient foods possibly benefit pathogens by constraining host immune function or benefit hosts by limiting parasite growth and reproduction. However, the effects of poor elemental food quality on a host's susceptibility to infection and disease have received little study. Here we show that the bacterial microparasite Pasteuria ramosa is affected by the elemental nutrition of its aquatic invertebrate host, Daphnia magna. We found that high food carbon : phosphorus (C: P) ratios significantly reduced infection rates of Pasteuria in Daphnia and led to lower within-host pathogen multiplication. In addition, greater virulent effects of bacterial infection on host reproduction were found in Daphnia-consuming P-deficient food. Poor Daphnia elemental nutrition thus reduced the growth and reproduction of its bacterial parasite, Pasteuria. The effects of poor host nutrition on the pathogen were further evidenced by Pasteuria's greater inhibition of reproduction in P-limited Daphnia. Our results provide strong evidence that elemental food quality can significantly influence the incidence and intensity of infectious disease in invertebrate hosts.
File(s)
Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Name

20130115163118_50f57646dbdbf.pdf

Size

216.4 KB

Format

Adobe PDF

Checksum

(MD5):78c2e6f904cf60a83bd0b548d6cec193

University of Basel

edoc
Open Access Repository University of Basel

  • About edoc
  • About Open Access at the University of Basel
  • edoc Policy

Built with DSpace-CRIS software - Extension maintained and optimized by 4Science

  • Privacy policy
  • End User Agreement