López-Uribe Margarita M, Sconiers Warren B, Frank Steven D, Dunn Robert R, Tarpy David R
Department of Entomology, North Carolina State University Department of Applied Ecology, North Carolina State University W. M. Keck Center for Behavioral Biology, Natural History Museum of Denmark
Department of Entomology, North Carolina State University.
Biol Lett. 2016 Mar;12(3):20150984. doi: 10.1098/rsbl.2015.0984.
Social living poses challenges for individual fitness because of the increased risk of disease transmission among conspecifics. Despite this challenge, sociality is an evolutionarily successful lifestyle, occurring in the most abundant and diverse group of organisms on earth--the social insects. Two contrasting hypotheses predict the evolutionary consequences of sociality on immune systems. The social group hypothesis posits that sociality leads to stronger individual immune systems because of the higher risk of disease transmission in social species. By contrast, the relaxed selection hypothesis proposes that social species have evolved behavioural immune defences that lower disease risk within the group, resulting in lower immunity at the individual level. We tested these hypotheses by measuring the encapsulation response in 11 eusocial and non-eusocial insect lineages. We built phylogenetic mixed linear models to investigate the effect of behaviour, colony size and body size on cellular immune response. We found a significantly negative effect of colony size on encapsulation response (Markov chain Monte Carlo generalized linear mixed model (mcmcGLMM) p < 0.05; phylogenetic generalized least squares (PGLS) p < 0.05). Our findings suggest that insects living in large societies may rely more on behavioural mechanisms, such as hygienic behaviours, than on immune function to reduce the risk of disease transmission among nest-mates.
由于同种个体间疾病传播风险增加,群居生活对个体健康构成挑战。尽管存在这一挑战,但群居是一种在进化上成功的生活方式,在地球上数量最多、种类最丰富的生物群体——群居昆虫中出现。两种截然不同的假说预测了群居对免疫系统的进化后果。社会群体假说认为,由于群居物种中疾病传播风险较高,群居会导致个体免疫系统更强。相比之下,放松选择假说提出,群居物种已经进化出行为免疫防御机制,降低了群体内的疾病风险,导致个体层面的免疫力较低。我们通过测量11个群居和非群居昆虫谱系的包囊化反应来检验这些假说。我们构建了系统发育混合线性模型,以研究行为、群体大小和体型对细胞免疫反应的影响。我们发现群体大小对包囊化反应有显著的负面影响(马尔可夫链蒙特卡罗广义线性混合模型(mcmcGLMM)p < 0.05;系统发育广义最小二乘法(PGLS)p < 0.05)。我们的研究结果表明,生活在大群体中的昆虫可能更多地依赖行为机制,如卫生行为,而不是免疫功能来降低巢友间疾病传播的风险。