Abstract

External perturbations, such as multispecies infections or anthelmintic treatments, can alter host–parasite interactions with consequences on the dynamics of infection. While the overall profile of infection might appear fundamentally conserved at the host population level, perturbations can disproportionately affect components of parasite demography or host responses, and ultimately impact parasite fitness and long‐term persistence.We took an immuno‐epidemiological approach to this reasoning and examined a rabbit–helminth system where animals were trickle‐dosed with either one or two helminth species, treated halfway through the experiment with an anthelmintic and reinfected one month later following the same initial regime. Parasite traits (body length and fecundity) and host immune responses (cytokines, transcription factors, antibodies) were quantified at fixed time points and compared before and after drug treatment, and between single and dual infections.Findings indicated a resistant host phenotype to Trichostrongylus retortaeformis where abundance, body length, and fecundity were regulated by a protective immune response. In contrast, Graphidium strigosum accumulated in the host and, while it stimulated a clear immune reaction, many genes were downregulated both following reinfection and in dual infection, suggestive of a low host resistance.External perturbations affected parasite fecundity, including body length and number of eggs in utero, more significantly than abundance; however, there was no consistency in the parasite‐immune relationships.Disentangling the processes affecting parasite life history, and how they relate to host responses, can provide a better understanding of how external disturbances impact disease severity and transmission, and how parasites strategies adjust to secure persistence at the host and the population level.

Highlights

  • Variation in host susceptibility to infections plays a fundamental role in the ecology and evolution of infectious diseases

  • We characterized changes in population dynamics and life‐his‐ tory traits of two gastrointestinal helminths when challenged by an anthelmintic treatment and the presence of the second parasite species

  • G. strigosum shows no clear response to the host immune reaction: Abundance accumulates with the constant exposure of rabbits to infective stages and fecundity is similar be‐ fore and after anthelmintic treatment in rabbits with single or dual infections

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Variation in host susceptibility to infections plays a fundamental role in the ecology and evolution of infectious diseases. In con‐ trast, the constant accumulation of parasites as host ages suggests an inadequate control (Hudson & Dobson, 1995), either because in‐ dividuals have low resistance or tolerate the infection (Best, White, & Boots, 2008; Råberg, Sim, & Read, 2007). Any change caused by external disturbances on the way parasites interact with the host is expected to impact parasite growth and fecundity. We synthesized fundamen‐ tal concepts from population dynamics with life‐history principles to assess quantitative changes in parasite variables (i.e., abundance, fecundity, body length, and eggs in utero) and related host immune responses, following perturbations with an anthelmintic and infec‐ tion with a second parasite species. Given that the two parasites are closely related (Audebert & Durette‐Desset, 2007) and colonize different parts of the gastrointestinal tract, we expect in‐ terference mediated by the immune response in rabbits with dual infections, with higher interference if the parasite is under a stronger immune regulation

| METHODS
Findings
| DISCUSSION
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