Evans Jessica K, Griffith Simon C, Klasing Kirk C, Buchanan Katherine L
Department of Biological Sciences, Macquarie University, Sydney, NSW 2109, Australia Centre for Integrative Ecology, School of Life and Environmental Sciences, Deakin University, Geelong, VIC 3217, Australia
Department of Biological Sciences, Macquarie University, Sydney, NSW 2109, Australia.
J Exp Biol. 2016 Jul 1;219(Pt 13):1985-93. doi: 10.1242/jeb.130948. Epub 2016 May 3.
Bacterial communities are thought to have fundamental effects on the growth and development of nestling birds. The antigen exposure hypothesis suggests that, for both nestlings and adult birds, exposure to a diverse range of bacteria would select for stronger immune defences. However, there are relatively few studies that have tested the immune/bacterial relationships outside of domestic poultry. We therefore sought to examine indices of immunity (microbial killing ability in naive birds, which is a measure of innate immunity, and the antibody response to sheep red blood cells, which measures adaptive immunity) in both adult and nestling zebra finches (Taeniopygia guttata). We did this throughout breeding and between reproductive attempts in nests that were experimentally manipulated to change the intensity of bacterial exposure. Our results suggest that nest sanitation and bacterial load affected measures of the adaptive immune system, but not the innate immune parameters tested. Adult finches breeding in clean nests had a lower primary antibody response to sheep red blood cells, particularly males, and a greater difference between primary and secondary responses. Adult microbial killing of Escherichia coli decreased as parents moved from incubation to nestling rearing for both nest treatments; however, killing of Candida albicans remained consistent throughout. In nestlings, both innate microbial killing and the adaptive antibody response did not differ between nest environments. Together, these results suggest that exposure to microorganisms in the environment affects the adaptive immune system in nesting birds, with exposure upregulating the antibody response in adult birds.
细菌群落被认为对雏鸟的生长发育具有根本性影响。抗原暴露假说表明,对于雏鸟和成鸟来说,接触多种细菌会促使其形成更强的免疫防御。然而,在家禽之外测试免疫/细菌关系的研究相对较少。因此,我们试图研究成年和雏鸟斑胸草雀(Taeniopygia guttata)的免疫指标(雏鸟的微生物杀灭能力,这是一种先天免疫的衡量指标,以及对绵羊红细胞的抗体反应,这衡量的是适应性免疫)。我们在整个繁殖过程中以及在经过实验操作以改变细菌暴露强度的巢中的繁殖尝试之间进行了此项研究。我们的结果表明,巢的卫生状况和细菌载量影响了适应性免疫系统的指标,但未影响所测试的先天免疫参数。在干净巢中繁殖的成年草雀对绵羊红细胞的初次抗体反应较低,尤其是雄性,并且初次和二次反应之间的差异更大。对于两种巢处理方式,随着亲鸟从孵化阶段进入雏鸟饲养阶段,成年草雀对大肠杆菌的微生物杀灭能力均下降;然而,对白色念珠菌的杀灭能力在整个过程中保持一致。在雏鸟中,巢环境之间的先天微生物杀灭能力和适应性抗体反应均无差异。总之,这些结果表明,环境中微生物的接触会影响筑巢鸟类的适应性免疫系统,接触会上调成年鸟类的抗体反应。