Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Organismal Biology, Iowa State University, Ames, Iowa 50011, USA.
Ecology. 2011 Apr;92(4):952-66. doi: 10.1890/10-0662.1.
Immunosenescence, the aging of the immune system, is well documented in humans and laboratory models and is known to increase infection risk, morbidity, and mortality among the old. Immunosenescence patterns have recently been unveiled in various free-living populations, but their consequences in the wild have not been explored. We investigated the consequences of immunosenescence in free-living Tree Swallows Tachycineta bicolor through a field experiment simulating a bacterial infection (challenge with lipopolysaccharide, LPS) in females of different ages during the nestling rearing period. We assessed behavioral and physiological responses of females, as well as growth and quality of their offspring, to determine the costs associated with the simulated infection. Results of the experiment differed between the two years of study. In the first year, old females challenged with LPS lost more body mass and reduced their nest visitation rates more, and their offspring tended to grow slower compared to similarly challenged younger females. In contrast, in the second year, old females did not appear to suffer larger costs than younger ones. Interestingly, immunosenescence was only detected during the first year of the study, suggesting that it is the dysregulated immune function characteristic of immunosenescent individuals rather than age per se that can lead to higher costs of immune defense in old individuals. These results provide the first evidence of costs of immunosenescence in free-living animals and support the hypothesis that old, immunosenescent individuals pay higher costs than younger ones when faced with a challenge to their immune system. Our results also suggest that these costs are mediated by an exaggerated sickness behavior, as seen in laboratory models, and can be modulated by ecological factors such as weather conditions and food availability.
免疫衰老,即免疫系统的衰老,在人类和实验室模型中已有充分的记录,并且已知会增加老年人的感染风险、发病率和死亡率。最近,在各种自由生活的人群中揭示了免疫衰老模式,但它们在野外的后果尚未得到探索。我们通过在育雏期模拟细菌感染(用脂多糖 LPS 挑战)来研究自由生活的树燕 Tachycineta bicolor 的免疫衰老的后果,该实验涉及不同年龄的雌性。我们评估了雌性的行为和生理反应,以及它们后代的生长和质量,以确定与模拟感染相关的成本。实验结果在两年的研究中有所不同。在第一年,接受 LPS 挑战的老年雌性体重减轻更多,筑巢访问次数减少更多,并且它们的后代生长速度比接受类似挑战的年轻雌性更慢。相比之下,在第二年,老年雌性似乎没有比年轻雌性遭受更大的代价。有趣的是,免疫衰老仅在研究的第一年被检测到,这表明是免疫衰老个体特征的失调免疫功能而不是年龄本身导致老年个体在免疫防御方面付出更高的代价。这些结果提供了自由生活动物中免疫衰老代价的第一个证据,并支持了这样一种假设,即面对免疫系统的挑战,年老的、免疫衰老的个体比年轻的个体付出更高的代价。我们的结果还表明,这些成本是由实验室模型中所见的过度疾病行为介导的,并且可以通过天气条件和食物供应等生态因素进行调节。