When a parasite can make you macho

What controls a person’s behaviour? Humans always seem to have some answers to this question. Historically, and still is the case for a large portion of humanity, it has been attributed to some types of divine power. At some stage, people, especially poets, thought it was the heart that controls humans; listen to your heart, they said! As science has progressed, the importance of the brain to our existence came in, and now the scientific community knows how the brain, and chemicals called hormones, can make a person. There is a new entrant to this list – parasites!

Parasite cheerleaders

The impact of Toxoplasma gondii, a protozoan parasite, on species has been the subject of several studies over the years. Past experimental studies have shown that infections can raise dopamine and testosterone production. All it requires for a parasite is to make a cyst at the right place, i.e. the brain. And can cause increased aggression and risk-taking behaviour, failure to avoid olfactory predator cues (i.e., seeking out instead of avoiding felid urine), and decreased neophobia (fear of novel food).

T. gondii in wolf’s clothing

A recent article by Meyer et al. in Communications Biology is another example, this time about the behaviour of wolves infected with the parasite. And they had 26 years of serological and observational data.

The researchers looked for three parameters of risk-taking: 1) leaving the pack, 2) getting dominant social status, and 3) approaching people and vehicles, and two causes of death: 1) death from other wolves and 2) death from humans.

The study has shown that the parasite has influenced the behaviour of wolves. The researchers identified an increase in the odds of dispersal and becoming a pack leader in wolves seropositive for T gondii.

References

Meyer et al., 5 (1180), 2022: Communications Biology
Parasite gives wolves what it takes to be pack leaders: Nature
Fatal attraction in rats infected with Toxoplasma gondii: Proc Biol Sci.