Adelman James Stephen, Moore Ignacio Tomás, Hawley Dana Michelle
Department of Biological Sciences, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, Virginia.
J Exp Zool A Ecol Genet Physiol. 2015 Jan;323(1):39-51. doi: 10.1002/jez.1894. Epub 2014 Nov 11.
Aggression can alter infectious disease dynamics through two, non-exclusive mechanisms: 1) increasing direct contact among hosts and 2) altering hosts' physiological response to pathogens. Here we examined the latter mechanism in a social songbird by manipulating intraspecific aggression in the absence of direct physical contact. We asked whether the extent of aggression an individual experiences alters glucocorticoid levels, androgen levels, and individual responses to infection in an ecologically relevant disease model: house finches (Haemorhous mexicanus) infected with Mycoplasma gallisepticum (MG). Wild-caught male finches were housed in one of three settings, designed to produce increasing levels of aggression: 1) alone, with no neighbor ("no neighbor"), 2) next to a sham-implanted stimulus male ("sham neighbor"), or 3) next to a testosterone-implanted stimulus male ("testosterone neighbor"). Following one week of social treatment, focal males were experimentally infected with MG, which causes severe conjunctivitis and induces sickness behaviors such as lethargy and anorexia. While social treatment increased aggression as predicted, there were no differences among groups in baseline corticosterone levels, total circulating androgens, or responses to infection. Across all focal individuals regardless of social treatment, pre-infection baseline corticosterone levels were negatively associated with the severity of conjunctivitis and sickness behaviors, suggesting that corticosterone may dampen inflammatory responses in this host-pathogen system. However, because corticosterone levels differed based upon population of origin, caution must be taken in interpreting this result. Taken together, these results suggest that in captivity, although aggression does not alter individual responses to MG, corticosterone may play a role in this disease.
1)增加宿主间的直接接触;2)改变宿主对病原体的生理反应。在此,我们通过在无直接身体接触的情况下操纵种内攻击行为,研究了一种群居鸣禽的后一种机制。在一个具有生态相关性的疾病模型中,我们探讨了个体所经历的攻击程度是否会改变糖皮质激素水平、雄激素水平以及对感染的个体反应:感染了鸡败血支原体(MG)的家朱雀(Haemorhous mexicanus)。野生捕获的雄性朱雀被安置在三种环境中的一种,旨在产生逐渐增加的攻击水平:1)单独饲养,没有邻居(“无邻居”);2)旁边是假植入的刺激雄性(“假邻居”);3)旁边是植入睾酮的刺激雄性(“睾酮邻居”)。经过一周的社交处理后,对焦点雄性朱雀进行实验性感染MG,MG会导致严重的结膜炎并引发诸如嗜睡和厌食等疾病行为。虽然社交处理如预期那样增加了攻击行为,但各组在基线皮质酮水平、总循环雄激素或对感染的反应方面没有差异。在所有焦点个体中,无论社交处理如何,感染前的基线皮质酮水平与结膜炎的严重程度和疾病行为呈负相关,这表明皮质酮可能会抑制该宿主 - 病原体系统中的炎症反应。然而,由于皮质酮水平因来源种群而异,在解释这一结果时必须谨慎。综上所述,这些结果表明,在圈养环境中,虽然攻击行为不会改变个体对MG的反应,但皮质酮可能在这种疾病中起作用。