Hijacking time: How Ophiocordyceps fungi could be using ant host clocks to manipulate behavior

Publication date

2022-03

Authors

de Bekker, CharissaISNI 0000000394344164
Das, Biplabendu

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

cc_by_nc_nd

Abstract

Ophiocordyceps fungi manipulate ant behaviour as a transmission strategy. Conspicuous changes in the daily timing of disease phenotypes suggest that Ophiocordyceps and other manipulators could be hijacking the host clock. We discuss the available data that support the notion that Ophiocordyceps fungi could be hijacking ant host clocks and consider how altering daily behavioural rhythms could benefit the fungal infection cycle. By reviewing time-course transcriptomics data for the parasite and the host, we argue that Ophiocordyceps has a light-entrainable clock that might drive daily expression of candidate manipulation genes. Moreover, ant rhythms are seemingly highly plastic and involved in behavioural division of labour, which could make them susceptible to parasite hijacking. To provisionally test whether the expression of ant behavioural plasticity and rhythmicity genes could be affected by fungal manipulation, we performed a gene co-expression network analysis on ant time-course data and linked it to available behavioural manipulation data. We found that behavioural plasticity genes reside in the same modules as those affected during fungal manipulation. These modules showed significant connectivity with rhythmic gene modules, suggesting that Ophiocordyceps could be indirectly affecting the expression of those genes as well.

Keywords

behavioural plasticity, circadian plasticity, entomopathogens, infectious disease, Zombie ants, Parasitology, Immunology, SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being

Citation

de Bekker, C & Das, B 2022, 'Hijacking time : How Ophiocordyceps fungi could be using ant host clocks to manipulate behavior', Parasite Immunology, vol. 44, no. 3, e12909, pp. 1-10. https://doi.org/10.1111/pim.12909