Evolutionary ecology of circadian rhythms in malaria parasites
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Embargo End Date
2100-12-31
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Abstract
Biological rhythms are thought to have evolved to enable organisms to organise their activities
according to the Earth’s predictable cycles, but quantifying the fitness advantages of rhythms
is challenging and data revealing their costs and benefits are scarce. More difficult still is
explaining why parasites that exclusively live within the bodies of other organisms have
biological rhythms. Rhythms exist in the development and traits of parasites, in host immune
responses, and in disease susceptibility. This raises the possibility that timing matters for how
hosts and parasites interact and, consequently, for the severity and transmission of diseases.
Despite their obvious importance in other fields, circadian rhythms are a neglected aspect of
ecology and evolutionary biology. The ambitions of this thesis are to integrate chronobiology,
parasitology and evolutionary theory with mathematical models to obtain a greater
understanding about how and suggest why malaria parasites have rhythms as well as the effect
of infection on host rhythms. First, I identify how malaria parasites lose their developmental
rhythms in culture, when they lack any potential time cues from the host. Next, I characterise
parasite rhythms inside the mammalian host in terms of synchrony and timing and demonstrate
there is genotype by environment interactions for characteristics of parasite rhythms. Then, I
investigate the effect that parasite infection has on host rhythms and show there is variation
between parasite genotypes in their effect on host locomotor activity and body temperature
rhythms during infections. Finally, I explore which host rhythms may be driving parasite
synchrony and timing and demonstrate the importance of peripheral host rhythms for the
timing of malaria parasite developmental rhythms. The data presented here provides novel and
important information on the role of rhythms during disease and opens up a new arena for
studying host-parasite coevolution.
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