Clulow Simon, Harris Merrilee, Mahony Michael J
School of Environmental and Life Sciences, University of Newcastle, Callaghan, NSW 2308, Australia.
Conserv Physiol. 2015 Sep 12;3(1):cov042. doi: 10.1093/conphys/cov042. eCollection 2015.
The global amphibian biodiversity crisis is driven by disease, habitat destruction and drastically altered ecosystems. It has given rise to an unprecedented need to understand the link between rapidly changing environments, immunocompetence and wildlife health (the nascent field of ecoimmunology). Increasing our knowledge of the ecoimmunology of amphibians necessitates the development of reliable, field-applicable methods of assessing immunocompetence in non-model species. The phytohaemagglutinin (PHA) inflammation assay uses a lectin to elicit localized inflammation that reflects an organism's capacity to mount an immune response. Although extensively used in birds to assess responses to environmental change, stress and disease, its application in amphibians has been extremely limited. We developed, validated and optimized a practical and effective phytohaemagglutinin inflammation assay in phylogenetically distant amphibians and demonstrated its suitability for use in a wide range of ecoimmunological studies. The protocol was effective for all species tested and worked equally well for both sexes and for adult and sub-adult animals. We determined that using set-force-measuring instruments resulted in a 'compression effect' that countered the inflammatory response, reinforcing the need for internal controls. We developed a novel method to determine peak response times more accurately and thereby improve assay sensitivity. Histological validation demonstrated considerable interspecies variation in the robustness of amphibian immune defences. Importantly, we applied the assay to a real-world scenario of varying environmental conditions and proved that the assay effectively detected differences in immune fitness between groups of animals exposed to ecologically meaningful levels of density stress. This provided strong evidence that one cost of metamorphic plasticity responses by tadpoles to increasing density is a reduction in post-metamorphic immune fitness and that metamorphosis does not prevent phenotypic carry-over of larval stress to the adult phenotype. This assay provides an effective tool for understanding the role of global environmental change in the amphibian extinction crisis.
全球两栖动物生物多样性危机是由疾病、栖息地破坏和生态系统的急剧变化所驱动的。这引发了人们前所未有的需求,即了解快速变化的环境、免疫能力和野生动物健康之间的联系(生态免疫学这一新兴领域)。增加我们对两栖动物生态免疫学的了解,需要开发可靠的、适用于野外的方法来评估非模式物种的免疫能力。植物血凝素(PHA)炎症试验使用一种凝集素引发局部炎症,反映生物体产生免疫反应的能力。尽管该试验在鸟类中被广泛用于评估对环境变化、应激和疾病的反应,但其在两栖动物中的应用极为有限。我们在系统发育关系较远的两栖动物中开发、验证并优化了一种实用有效的植物血凝素炎症试验,并证明了其适用于广泛的生态免疫学研究。该方案对所有测试物种均有效,对雄性和雌性以及成年和亚成年动物都同样适用。我们确定使用设定力测量仪器会产生“压缩效应”,抵消炎症反应,这进一步凸显了设置内部对照的必要性。我们开发了一种新方法来更准确地确定峰值反应时间,从而提高试验的灵敏度。组织学验证表明两栖动物免疫防御的稳健性存在显著的种间差异。重要的是,我们将该试验应用于不同环境条件的实际场景中,证明该试验有效地检测到了暴露于具有生态意义的密度应激水平的动物群体之间免疫适应性的差异。这提供了有力证据,表明蝌蚪对密度增加的变态可塑性反应的一个代价是变态后免疫适应性的降低,并且变态并不能阻止幼虫应激的表型传递到成年表型。该试验为理解全球环境变化在两栖动物灭绝危机中的作用提供了一个有效工具。