Thoß M, Luzynski K C, Ante M, Miller I, Penn D J
Konrad Lorenz Institute of Ethology, Department of Integrative Biology and Evolution, University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna, Vienna, Austria.
Institute of Medical Biochemistry, Department of Biomedical Sciences, University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna, Vienna, Austria.
Front Ecol Evol. 2015 Jun 30;3. doi: 10.3389/fevo.2015.00071.
House mice ( produce a variable number of major urinary proteins (MUPs), and studies suggest that each individual produces a unique MUP profile that provides a distinctive odor signature controlling individual and kin recognition. This 'barcode hypothesis' requires that MUP urinary profiles show high individual variability within populations and also high individual consistency over time, but tests of these assumptions are lacking. We analyzed urinary MUP profiles of 66 wild-caught house mice from eight populations using isoelectric focusing. We found that MUP profiles of wild male house mice are not individually unique, and though they were highly variable, closer inspection revealed that the variation strongly depended on MUP band type. The prominent ('major) bands were surprisingly homogenous (and hence most MUPs are not polymorphic), but we also found inconspicuous ('minor') bands that were highly variable and therefore potential candidates for individual fingerprints. We also examined changes in urinary MUP profiles of 58 males over time (from 6 to 24 weeks of age), and found that individual MUP profiles and MUP concentration were surprisingly dynamic, and showed significant changes after puberty and during adulthood. Contrary to what we expected, however, the minor bands were the most variable over time, thus no good candidates for individual fingerprints. Although MUP profiles do not provide individual fingerprints, we found that MUP profiles were more similar among siblings than non-kin despite considerable fluctuation. Our findings show that MUP profiles are not highly stable over time, they do not show strong individual clustering, and thus challenge the barcode hypothesis. Within-individual dynamics of MUP profiles indicate a different function of MUPs in individual recognition than previously assumed and advocate an alternative hypothesis ('dynamic changes' hypothesis).
家鼠会产生数量不等的主要尿蛋白(MUPs),研究表明,每只家鼠都会产生独特的MUP谱,该谱提供了一种独特的气味特征,用于控制个体识别和亲属识别。这种“条形码假说”要求MUP尿液谱在种群内表现出高个体变异性,并且随着时间的推移也具有高个体一致性,但缺乏对这些假设的检验。我们使用等电聚焦分析了来自八个种群的66只野生捕获家鼠的尿液MUP谱。我们发现,野生雄性家鼠的MUP谱并非个体独特,尽管它们具有高度变异性,但仔细检查发现,这种变异强烈依赖于MUP条带类型。突出的(“主要”)条带惊人地均匀(因此大多数MUP不是多态性的),但我们也发现了不显眼的(“次要”)条带,这些条带高度可变,因此是个体指纹的潜在候选者。我们还研究了58只雄性家鼠随时间(从6周龄到24周龄)尿液MUP谱的变化,发现个体MUP谱和MUP浓度惊人地动态变化,并且在青春期和成年期后出现了显著变化。然而,与我们的预期相反,次要条带随时间变化最大,因此不是个体指纹的良好候选者。尽管MUP谱不能提供个体指纹,但我们发现,尽管有相当大的波动,兄弟姐妹之间的MUP谱比非亲属之间的更相似。我们的研究结果表明,MUP谱随时间不是高度稳定的,它们没有表现出强烈的个体聚类,因此对条形码假说提出了挑战。MUP谱的个体内动态表明,MUP在个体识别中的功能与先前假设的不同,并支持另一种假说(“动态变化”假说)。