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越大越好:体型变化解释了食物对后代抗病能力的母体效应。

Bigger is better: changes in body size explain a maternal effect of food on offspring disease resistance.

作者信息

Garbutt Jennie S, Little Tom J

机构信息

Ashworth Laboratories Institute of Evolutionary Biology The University of Edinburgh Edinburgh UK.

出版信息

Ecol Evol. 2017 Feb 3;7(5):1403-1409. doi: 10.1002/ece3.2709. eCollection 2017 Mar.

Abstract

Maternal effects triggered by changes in the environment (e.g., nutrition or crowding) can influence the outcome of offspring-parasite interactions, with fitness consequences for the host and parasite. Outside of the classic example of antibody transfer in vertebrates, proximate mechanisms have been little studied, and thus, the adaptive significance of maternal effects on infection is not well resolved. We sought to determine why food-stressed mothers give birth to offspring that show a low rate of infection when the crustacean is exposed to an orally infective bacterial pathogen. These more-resistant offspring are also larger at birth and feed at a lower rate. Thus, reduced disease resistance could result from slow-feeding offspring ingesting fewer bacterial spores or because their larger size allows for greater immune investment. To distinguish between these theories, we performed an experiment in which we measured body size, feeding rate, and susceptibility, and were able to show that body size is the primary mechanism causing altered susceptibility: Larger were less likely to become infected. Contrary to our predictions, there was also a trend that fast-feeding were likely to become infected. Thus, our results explain how a maternal environmental effect can alter offspring disease resistance (though body size), and highlight the potential complexity of relationship between feeding rate and susceptibility in a host that encounters a parasite whilst feeding.

摘要

由环境变化(如营养或拥挤)引发的母体效应会影响后代与寄生虫相互作用的结果,对宿主和寄生虫的适应性产生影响。除了脊椎动物中抗体转移的经典例子外,其近端机制鲜有研究,因此,母体效应在感染方面的适应性意义尚未得到很好的阐释。我们试图确定为什么当甲壳类动物暴露于经口感染的细菌病原体时,食物匮乏的母体会产出感染率较低的后代。这些抵抗力更强的后代出生时体型也更大,进食速度更低。因此,抗病性降低可能是因为进食缓慢的后代摄入的细菌孢子较少,或者是因为它们较大的体型允许更多的免疫投入。为了区分这些理论,我们进行了一项实验,测量了体型大小、进食速度和易感性,结果表明体型大小是导致易感性改变的主要机制:体型较大的个体感染的可能性较小。与我们的预测相反,还有一种趋势是进食速度快的个体更容易感染。因此,我们的研究结果解释了母体环境效应如何通过体型大小改变后代的抗病性,并突出了在进食时接触寄生虫的宿主中,进食速度和易感性之间关系的潜在复杂性。

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