Introduction
The survival of parasites within hosts requires intimate fine-tuning to conditions in the site where they reside. In helminths this ranges from morphological structures required to maintain position (e.g. scoleces of cestodes, probosces of acanthocephalans (Smyth, Reference Smyth1976) and the intricate surface ridges of nematodes, called crêtes (Durette-Desset, Reference Durette-Desset1985)), host enzyme-blocking factors (Hawley et al., Reference Hawley, Martzen and Peanasky1994; Zang & Maizels, Reference Zang and Maizels2001) to an array of molecules that interfere with host immune effector mechanisms (Hewitson et al., Reference Hewitson, Harcus and Murray2011; Whelan et al., Reference Whelan, Hartmann and Rausch2012). It is well established that intestinal helminths have preferred sites (niche restriction) within the intestines of their vertebrate hosts to which they are highly adapted and in which they grow, survive and reproduce optimally (Crompton, Reference Crompton1973; Holmes, Reference Holmes1973; Behnke, Reference Behnke1974; Rohde, Reference Rohde1994; Sukhdeo & Bansemir, Reference Sukhdeo and Bansemir1996), and which they locate by responding to specific environmental cues (Sukhdeo, Reference Sukhdeo1990; Sukhdeo & Sukhdeo, Reference Sukhdeo and Sukhdeo1994). Even closely related species of nematodes co-occurring in the same host species may show niche segregation, as reflected in longitudinal differences in their distribution along the intestinal tract (Sommerville, Reference Sommerville1963), as well as radial (intestinal niches from the lumen at the centre, outwards through the mucosa, submucosa to the serosa), as recorded in the seminal paper by Schad (Reference Schad1963; but see also Hominick & Davey, Reference Hominick and Davey1973).
The trichostrongyloid nematode Heligmosomoides polygyrus of Eurasian wood mice (Apodemus sylvaticus, also referred to as the long-tailed field mouse) aggregates in the anterior sections of the small intestine (Panter, Reference Panter1969; Lewis & Bryant, Reference Lewis and Bryant1976; Beckett & Pike, Reference Beckett and Pike1980). The long coil-like shape of this species (previously known as Nematospiroides dubius; Behnke et al., Reference Behnke, Keymer and Lewis1991) enables worms to coil around and between the villi especially those located in the duodenum and the anterior jejunum of the small intestine (Bansemir & Sukhdeo, Reference Bansemir and Sukhdeo1996). Here the worms feed on enterocytes of the villi (Bansemir & Sukhdeo, Reference Bansemir and Sukhdeo1994).
In contrast, the oxyuroid nematode Syphacia stroma is an entirely lumen-dwelling species and, like most oxyuroids, feeds on symbiotic intestinal microorganisms and also on gut contents (Dunning & Wright, Reference Dunning and Wright1970; Adamson, Reference Adamson1989). Syphacia stroma lives in the anterior portion of the small intestine, but is less site specific in that worms can often be found further along the small intestine, especially in heavy infections. Moreover, patent female worms migrate through the small and large intestines to deposit their eggs on the external perianal region of the host (Lewis, Reference Lewis1969).
These two species, H. polygyrus and S. stroma, are the dominant intestinal helminths of wood mice in the British Isles and often occur in concurrent infections (Lewis, Reference Lewis1969; Lewis & Twigg, Reference Lewis and Twigg1972; Behnke et al., Reference Behnke, Gilbert, Abu-Madi and Lewis2005). Experimental studies have shown that there may be different outcomes of co-occurrence of two species that normally reside in the same location in the gut (Christensen et al., Reference Christensen, Nansen, Fagbemi and Monrad1987; Behnke et al., Reference Behnke, Bajer, Siński and Wakelin2001). These include one species residing more posteriorly than normal in a sub-optimal location (e.g. the cestode Hymenolepis diminuta in concurrent infections with the acanthocephalan Moniliformis moniliformis in rats), while the other maintains its position in its preferred location (M. moniliformis). Hymenolepis diminuta eventually outlives M. moniliformis in rats, and recovers its normal attachment site in the duodenum once the acanthocephalans have died from senility (Holmes, Reference Holmes1961). Posterior shifts in the mean intestinal position of the acanthocephalans Pomphorhynchus laevis in the presence of Acanthocephalus clavula, and vice versa, and associated change in niche width, have been reported in trout (Byrne et al., Reference Byrne, Holland, Kennedy and Poole2003), and related in both cases to intensities of infection with the concurrently infecting species.
While such interactions between competing helminths in the intestine are well known from experimental infections, there are fewer records from naturally infected wild rodents (Stock & Holmes, Reference Stock and Holmes1988; Haukisalmi & Henttonen, Reference Haukisalmi and Henttonen1993). In the present study, we have exploited three datasets, from three different sites in the south of England, in which the occurrence of intestinal helminths in wood mice was quantified separately in each third of the length of the intestine. Given the quite different strategies of H. polygyrus and S. stroma for survival in the intestine, and their different food resources, we test the null hypothesis that co-occurrence should make no difference to their distribution along the small intestine of wood mice.
Materials and methods
Databases
We exploited three databases based on surveys of the helminth parasites of wood mice in woodland and grassland sites in southern England. The first was conducted from January to July 1969 in the Great Wood, Virginia Water, Surrey (GPS 51.417286–0.567032) – a flat, dry area of mainly oak and birch woodland with bracken and bramble ground flora. The second survey was conducted in September 1985 at Rogate Field Station, Rogate in Hampshire (GPS 51.006610–0.853225) – an overgrown meadow of uncut and ungrazed grasses flanked by substantial woody hedgerows. The third survey was carried out in September 1987 and 1991 and was undertaken in a ploughed and cultivated grassland site at Silwood Park, Ascot, Berkshire (GPS 51.411781–0.641590).
Laboratory procedures
Mice were captured over a period of ten trapping nights each month using Longworth traps provided with hay and food. The maturity of males was determined by the position and size of the testes. In mature males, large testes descend into the scrotal sacs whereas males with small testes situated within the body cavity were considered juvenile and incapable of breeding, which was also confirmed by examination of the epididymis for spermatozoa. For analysis, juvenile male mice weighed between 6.9 and 18.8 gm, with a range of 19.00 to 33.4 gm in mature males. In female mice, the weight of the lightest pregnant female during the period of maximum number of pregnancies was taken and mice of this particular weight and above were considered to be mature ranging from 18.9 to 36.45 gm compared with 9.5–18.5 gm in juvenile females. Prior to post-mortem examination mice were killed by exposure to chloroform-soaked cotton wool. The alimentary canal was removed and the region between the end of the stomach (at the pyloric sphincter) and beginning of the rectum, was measured and divided into three equal length sections, referred to as the anterior, middle and posterior sections of the intestine, prior to being examined for helminth parasites. Part of the posterior section incidentally contained the colon and caecum.
Statistical methods
Summary statistics are presented as mean worm burdens of both H. polygyrus and S. stroma with standard errors of the mean (SEM). The percentage distribution of worms (PWB) was calculated in the three intestinal sections of each mouse and mean values are referred to as mean percentage of worm burden (MPWB). Mean worm burdens and the MPWB from each of the three intestinal sections were calculated from each of the three surveys. Then, following the recommendations of Zuur et al. (Reference Zuur, Ieno and Elphick2009), some factors that may have influenced the intestinal distribution of parasites were explored using non-parametric tests in IBM-SPSS 24 (1 New Orchard Road, Armonk, New York 10504-1722, USA) (Kruskal–Wallis, Mann–Whitney U test and Spearman's test of correlation). In each case the value of the relevant test statistic (H, U and rs, respectively) and the probability (P) for rejecting the null hypothesis (α = 0.05) were provided. When analysing the effect of S. stroma on H. polygyrus, data were provided on all hosts that harboured at least one individual of H. polygyrus, and similarly when analysing the effect of H. polygyrus on S. stroma, only data from mice that harboured at least one individual of S. stroma were used. Finally, generalized linear models (GLMs) in R version 2.2.1 (R Core Development Team, the R Foundation for Statistical Computing) were provided after converting the PWBs to binomial values (see Douma & Weedon, Reference Douma and Weedon2018). Full factorial binomial GLMs were evaluated as described elsewhere (Behnke et al., Reference Behnke, Rogan, Craig, Jackson and Hide2021), with sex (at two levels, males and females), age (at two levels, juveniles and mature mice), site (at three levels, three sites) and status (at two levels corresponding to mice infected only with S. stroma or concurrently with H. polygyrus) as explanatory factors. Minimum sufficient models were also fitted incorporating only significant main effects and two-way interactions. From these, values of deviance (DEV) for the main effect of status, and two-way interactions with status were provided as the principal objectives of the study.
Results
Summary statistics for the combined dataset
The database included 290 records of individual mice, but five mice that were not infected with either H. polygyryus or S. stroma were excluded. Of the 285 mice that carried at least one individual of H. polygyrus or S. stroma, 181 were from the Virginia Water site, 27 from Rogate and 77 from Silwood Park (table 1). Among these mice, 264 (92.6%) carried H. polygyrus, 163 (57.2%) S. stroma and 142 (49.8%) had both species. The intensity of infection with H. polygyrus (all mice infected with this species) was 18.3 ± 1.44 (n = 264) and with S. stroma, 78.5 ± 10.32 (n = 163).
Worm burdens in single and concurrently infected mice
Worm burdens of H. polygyrus were heavier in concurrently infected compared with single infected mice (single infection = 14.8 ± 1.76, n = 122; concurrent infection = 21.3 ± 2.18, n = 142; Mann–Whitney U test, U 122,142 = 10,617.5, P = 0.002). However, despite the arithmetically higher intensity of infection with S. stroma in concurrently infected mice, for this species the difference with single-infected mice was not significant (single infection = 56.3 ± 13.61, n = 21; concurrent infection = 81.8 ± 11.66, n = 142; Mann–Whitney U test, U 21,142 = 1,505.0, P = 0.9).
Distribution of worms in single and concurrently infected mice
Heligmosomoides polygyrus was largely confined to the anterior third of the intestine, with heavier worm burdens overall occurring in concurrently infected mice (fig. 1A). When worm burdens for each mouse were expressed as the percentage present in each third of the intestine, the presence of S. stroma made no difference to the distribution of H. polygyrus (fig. 1B).
In single worm infections, S. stroma was more or less equally distributed between the first and second thirds of the intestine, whether expressed as mean number of worms present or as MPWB (fig. 1C, D, respectively), although in the latter case values were marginally higher for the middle section. However, when H. polygrus was present in the anterior third of the intestine, both the mean S. stroma worm burden in this section (Mann–Whitney U test, U 21,142 = 646.0, P < 0.001) and the MPWB (U 21,142 = 274.5, P < 0.001) were significantly lower than in single-species infections. There was a corresponding increase in the MPWB (U 21,142 = 2671.0, P < 0.001) in the middle section, but an increase in worm burdens was not significant (U 21,142 = 1,817.5, P = 0.106). There was also a very small increase in the number of S. stroma in the posterior third of the intestine in concurrently infected mice, but this was not significant (e.g. for MPWB, U 21,142 = 1,666.0, P = 0.167).
The effect of varying intensities of H. polygyrus on the distribution of S. stroma
Since in the presence of H. polygyrus the percentage distribution of S. stroma altered, with a greater percentage of worms located in the middle section of the intestine, it was of interest to determine whether the extent of this posterior redistribution of S. stroma was dependent also on the intensity of infection with H. polygyrus. There was a clear dose-dependent effect, with higher H. polygyrus worm burdens in mice resulting in fewer S. stroma in the anterior section (fig. 2; for worm burdens, rs = −0.297, n = 163, P < 0.001; for percentage worm burdens, rs = −0.387, n = 163, P < 0.001;) and a corresponding higher percentage now located in the middle section of the intestine (rs = 0.300, n = 163, P < 0.001) (fig. 2).
Factors affecting the distribution of S. stroma
Datasets used for this analysis included four variables that may have affected the distribution of S. stroma in single and concurrent infections – that is, host age and sex, the trapping site and, in the case of mice trapped in Silwood Park, the years in which mice were captured (i.e. in 1987 and 1991). Data in table 2 show that although there were some relatively minor variations, irrespective of host age, sex or site of capture, in all cases the percentage of S. stroma in the anterior intestinal section was smaller when mice were also concurrently infected with H. polygyrus.
The difference in MPWB of S. stroma in the anterior intestinal section between mice infected only with S. stroma and those with concurrent H. polygyrus infection was highly significant (GLM with binary errors, main effect of status, Dev 1, 157 = 95.243, P < 0.0001). This difference was not affected by host sex (for the two-way interaction status × sex, Dev 1, 148 = 0.945, P = 0.3) nor host age class (the two-way interaction status × age Dev 1, 148 = 0.391, P = 0.5). However, there was a significant difference between the three field sites in the extent of the reduction in S. stroma in the anterior section of the intestine in concurrent infections (the two-way interaction status × site, Dev 2, 154 = 27.515, P < 0.001), as shown in table 2.
In contrast, in the middle section of the intestine, the percentage of S. stroma was higher in concurrent infections compared with mice just harbouring S. stroma, and this was the case in both age classes, sexes and all three sites where mice were trapped (table 2). The difference in the MPWB of S. stroma in the middle section, between mice infected only with S. stroma and those with concurrent H. polygyrus, was highly significant (GLM with binary errors, main effect of status, Dev 1, 157 = 403.23, P < 0.0001). However, in this case there were also significant two-way interactions with sex (for the two-way interaction status × sex, Dev 1, 148 = 4.385, P = 0.036), with age class (the two-way interaction status × age, Dev 1, 148 = 24.039, P < 0.0001) and site (the two-way interaction status × site, Dev 2,148 = 35.52, P < 0.001). In each case, these significant two-way interactions arose because of variation in the extent of the difference between single and concurrently infected mice of both sexes, both age classes and from the three sites (table 2). The key point, however, is that despite these variations in each case a greater percentage of worms accumulated in the middle section of the intestine when mice also harboured H. polygurus.
At the Silwood Park site, mice were trapped in 1987 and 1991, although in 1987 all mice carrying S. stroma at this site were also infected with H. polygyrus, so it was not possible to test temporal variation in the extent of the redistribution of S. stroma in the presence of H. polygyrus at this site. Nevertheless, in 1991 the values for MPWB of S. stroma were much in line with all the other datasets referred to above. In the anterior section of the intestine in single species infections vs. concurrent infections the respective values were 42.0 ± 9.76% and 0.6 ± 0.42%, compared with 56.6 ± 9.31% vs. 91.6 ± 5.27%, in the middle and 1.4 ± 1.37 vs. 7.8 ± 5.20% in the posterior sections.
Identification of additional helminth species in wood mice
Post-mortem examination of the body cavity, alimentary canal and its offshoots confirmed the presence of five additional helminth species, including the two cestodes Catenotaenia pusilla (Goeze, 1782) and Hymenolepis murissyvatici (Rudolphi, 1819) occupying the posterior intestinal section and the nematode Aonchotheca murissylvatici (Diesing, 1851) Lopez-Neyra, 1947 in the anterior section near the stomach. The larval cestode in the liver was identified as Cysticercus Taeniae-taeniaeformis (Batsch, 1786) and the digenean in the interlobary canals of the pancreas as Corrigia vitta (Dujardin, 1845). In mature mice from Great Wood, respective values for prevalence and intensity of infection were 9.7% and 8.4 (C. pusilla), 8% and 4.0 (H. murissylvatici), 3.5% and 4.1 (A. murissylvatici), 2.9% and 1.0 (Cysticercus T.-taeniaeformis) and 25.7% and 16.1 (C. vitta). Worm burdens of these helminth species were even lower in mice examined from Silwood Park and Rogate, suggesting that these levels of infection and their location within the host, especially C. vitta, are unlikely to have influenced the observed interactions between H. polygyrus and S. stroma in the anterior and middle sections of the intestine.
Discussion
The principal findings of the present study are that in concurrent infections with H. polygyrus and S. stroma in wood mice, the percentage distribution of the former species along the small intestine was unaffected, while proportionally more individuals of the latter species were located more posteriorly in the middle region of the intestine. This was unexpected, since based on the occupancy of quite different niches in the intestines of their hosts, we had predicted no change in the distribution of either species. The extent of the redistribution of S. stroma was highly dependent on the intensity of the H. polygyrus infection (i.e. the total worm burden), with relatively fewer S. stroma persisting in the anterior intestinal section as the intensity of H. polygyrus increased. Moreover, this pattern of redistribution of S. stroma into the middle section in concurrent infections with H. polygyrus was evident in both age classes and sexes of mice, and also in all three trapping sites.
Heligmosomoides polygyrus are relatively long, thin worms, which in their relaxed state appear as spring-like coils, reflecting a body shape that allows them to coil around villi in the small intestine (Durette-Desset, Reference Durette-Desset1985) and preferentially in the duodenum, where in mice the villi are longer than more posteriorly (Bansemir & Sukhdeo, Reference Bansemir and Sukhdeo1996). This gives individuals of this species a firm holdfast on the intestinal mucosa, and it may be that this is robust enough to enable the worms to remain in the anterior part of the intestine despite the presence of other helminth species. The body shape of S. stroma on the other hand is much shorter and wider than H. polygrus and, hence, unlikely to allow S. stroma to coil around villi. The latter species is atypical among Syphacia spp. in living in the anterior and middle regions of the intestine, since most of the other species of this genus live in the large intestine, including the caecum and colon of their hosts (Tenora & Mészáros, Reference Tenora and Mészáros1975). Syphacia stroma lives entirely in the intestinal lumen, without any evident holdfast, and, therefore, is more likely to lose position when competition and/or antagonistic interactions with other species become an issue. Like other oxyuroid species, S. stroma probably feeds mainly on intestinal micro-symbionts (Dunning & Wright, Reference Dunning and Wright1970; Adamson, Reference Adamson1989), the composition of which is known to change in helminth infections, and notably in the presence of H. polygyrus (Reynolds et al., Reference Reynolds, Smith and Filbey2014; Cortés et al., Reference Cortés, Peachey, Jenkins, Scott and Cantacessi2019; Lawson et al., Reference Lawson, Robert and Grencis2021). Moreover, H. polygyrus is known to cause marked pathophysiological changes in intestinal function (Liu, Reference Liu1965; Kristan, Reference Kristan2002; Cywińska et al., Reference Cywińska, Czumińska and Schollenberger2004), which may also affect the intestinal microbiome. If a redistribution of the specific intestinal microorganisms on which S. stroma feed does take place in the intestine of mice infected with H. polygyrus, this may explain why more S. stroma are located posteriorly than in concurrent infections, a hypothesis that could be tested experimentally.
The present study has drawn attention to the dynamic nature of the location of nematodes in the intestinal tract, a finding that is consistent with earlier studies (Stock & Holmes, Reference Stock and Holmes1988; Haukisalmi & Henttonen, Reference Haukisalmi and Henttonen1993). Although more individuals of S. stroma end up accumulating in the middle intestinal section in concurrent infections, this section is not an abnormal location for the species since in hosts that have no concurrent infections with H. polygyrus, S. stroma individuals are about equally distributed between the anterior and middle sections, even when the total intensity of infection is low. Therefore, in this instance, competition in concurrent infections does not result in S. stroma having to live in a suboptimal site for feedings and reproduction. However, the test of his hypothesis would require individual worms from anterior, middle and posterior sections of the intestine to be measured and their fecundity assessed. If this interaction between the species turns out to be based upon direct competition between them, given the shift of S. stroma into the middle section in the presence of H. polygyrus and essentially no change in the distribution of H. polygyrus, S. stroma would appear to be the weaker competitor, as hypothesized by Holmes (Reference Holmes1973) when two species occupy the same location in the intestine.
Although prevalence and abundance of H. polygyrus and S. stroma can be significantly affected by host age (Behnke et al., Reference Behnke, Lewis, Mohd Zain and Gilbert1999), this variable did not influence the prevailing pattern of reduced S. stroma distribution in the anterior intestine when concurrently infected with H. polygyrus. This result is unsurprising, as the effects of host age on parasite occurrence have been related to increasing opportunity for older mice to have contact with free-living transmission stages (Behnke et al., Reference Behnke, Lewis, Mohd Zain and Gilbert1999), a variable unlikely to affect the intestinal distribution of S. stroma.
Finally, whilst it is clear from our results that a redistribution of S. stroma does occur in concurrent infections, the nature of the exact signal/factor that is ultimately responsible for S. stroma avoiding the anterior section of the small intestine in concurrent infections is unknown. It is unlikely to be physical interaction between these species, but may be a response to excretory/secretory products of H. polygyrus, to changes in physiology of the mucosa in the duodenum, perhaps through components of the host's response to H. polygyrus, or to an intestinal redistribution of the micro-symbionts on which S. stroma feed, in the presence of H. polygyrus. This may be a fruitful field for further experimental investigation in facilities where the wild host wood mice, A. sylvaticus, are bred and maintained in the laboratory.
Acknowledgements
We wish to extend our sincere thanks to Mrs Rosemary Doran and students of the Royal Holloway University of London, together with Professor P.J. Whitfield and students from King's College, and Dr W.M. Hominick and students from Imperial College University of London for their assistance in trapping wood mice from the three study sites.
Financial support
None.
Conflicts of interest
None.
Ethical standards
The maintenance of animals conformed to local and Home Office Code of Practice guidance (ISBN 9781474112390).
Author contributions
J.W.L. conceived and designed the study. N.J.M. assisted and collated data from field sites plus made a significant contribution to the text of the manuscript. J.M.B. analysed the results, and all authors contributed to the preparation of the manuscript and approved the submitted version.