Cornet Stéphane, Brouat Carine, Diagne Christophe, Charbonnel Nathalie
Centre de Biologie Pour la Gestion des Populations (UMR INRA/IRD/CIRAD/Montpellier SupAgro) IRD Montferrier-sur-Lez France.
Centre de Biologie Pour la Gestion des Populations (UMR INRA/IRD/CIRAD/Montpellier SupAgro) IRD Montferrier-sur-Lez France; Centre de Biologie Pour la Gestion des Populations (UMR INRA/IRD/CIRAD/Montpellier SupAgro) IRD Campus de Bel-Air, Dakar Sénégal; Département de Biologie Animale, Faculté des Sciences et Techniques Université Chiekh Anta Diop Fann, Dakar Sénégal.
Evol Appl. 2016 Jul 22;9(8):952-62. doi: 10.1111/eva.12406. eCollection 2016 Sep.
Immunity is at the core of major theories related to invasion biology. Among them, the evolution of increased competitive ability (EICA) and EICA-refined hypotheses have been used as a reference work. They postulate that the release from pathogens often experienced during invasion should favour a reallocation of resources from (costly) immune defences to beneficial life-history traits associated with invasive potential. We review studies documenting immune changes during animal invasions. We describe the designs and approaches that have been applied and discuss some reasons that prevent drawing generalized conclusions regarding EICA hypotheses. We detail why a better assessment of invasion history and immune costs, including immunopathologies and parasite communities, could improve our understanding of the relationships between immunity and invasion success. Finally, we propose new perspectives to revisit the EICA hypotheses. We first emphasize the neutral and adaptive mechanisms involved in immune changes, as well as timing of the later. Such investigation will help decipher whether immune changes are a consequence of pre-adaptation, or the result of postintroduction adaptations to invasion front conditions. We next bring attention to new avenues of research that remain unexplored, namely age-dependent immunity and gut microbiota, potential key factors underlying adaptation to invasion front environment and modulating invasion success.
免疫是入侵生物学相关主要理论的核心。其中,竞争能力增强的进化(EICA)及其细化假说被用作参考依据。它们假定,在入侵过程中病原体压力的解除,往往有利于资源从(成本高昂的)免疫防御重新分配到与入侵潜力相关的有益生活史特征上。我们回顾了记录动物入侵过程中免疫变化的研究。我们描述了所采用的设计和方法,并讨论了一些妨碍就EICA假说得出普遍结论的原因。我们详细阐述了为何更好地评估入侵历史和免疫成本,包括免疫病理学和寄生虫群落,能够增进我们对免疫与入侵成功之间关系的理解。最后,我们提出了重新审视EICA假说的新观点。我们首先强调免疫变化所涉及的中性和适应性机制,以及后者的发生时间。此类研究将有助于弄清楚免疫变化是预适应的结果,还是引入后对入侵前沿条件适应的结果。接下来,我们提请关注尚未探索的新研究途径,即年龄依赖性免疫和肠道微生物群,它们可能是适应入侵前沿环境和调节入侵成功的潜在关键因素。