Davy Christina M, Donaldson Michael E, Willis Craig K R, Saville Barry J, McGuire Liam P, Mayberry Heather, Wilcox Alana, Wibbelt Gudrun, Misra Vikram, Bollinger Trent, Kyle Christopher J
Environmental and Life Sciences Graduate Program Trent University Peterborough ON Canada.
Department of Biology University of Winnipeg Winnipeg MB Canada.
Ecol Evol. 2017 Aug 2;7(18):7161-7170. doi: 10.1002/ece3.3234. eCollection 2017 Sep.
Mitigation of emerging infectious diseases that threaten global biodiversity requires an understanding of critical host and pathogen responses to infection. For multihost pathogens where pathogen virulence or host susceptibility is variable, host-pathogen interactions in tolerant species may identify potential avenues for adaptive evolution in recently exposed, susceptible hosts. For example, the fungus causes white-nose syndrome (WNS) in hibernating bats and is responsible for catastrophic declines in some species in North America, where it was recently introduced. Bats in Europe and Asia, where the pathogen is endemic, are only mildly affected. Different environmental conditions among Nearctic and Palearctic hibernacula have been proposed as an explanation for variable disease outcomes, but this hypothesis has not been experimentally tested. We report the first controlled, experimental investigation of response to in a tolerant, European species of bat (the greater mouse-eared bat, ). We compared body condition, disease outcomes and gene expression in control (sham-exposed) and exposed that hibernated under controlled environmental conditions following treatment. Tolerant experienced extremely limited fungal growth and did not exhibit symptoms of WNS. However, we detected no differential expression of genes associated with immune response in exposed bats, indicating that immune response does not drive tolerance of in late hibernation. Variable responses to among bat species cannot be attributed solely to environmental or ecological factors. Instead, our results implicate coevolution with the pathogen, and highlight the dynamic nature of the "white-nose syndrome transcriptome." Interspecific variation in response to exposure by the host (and possibly pathogen) emphasizes the importance of context in studies of the bat-WNS system, and robust characterization of genetic responses to exposure in various hosts and the pathogen should precede any attempts to use particular bat species as generalizable "model hosts."
减轻威胁全球生物多样性的新出现传染病需要了解宿主和病原体对感染的关键反应。对于病原体毒力或宿主易感性可变的多宿主病原体,耐受性物种中的宿主 - 病原体相互作用可能为最近暴露的易感宿主的适应性进化指明潜在途径。例如,这种真菌在冬眠蝙蝠中引起白鼻综合征(WNS),并导致北美一些物种的灾难性数量下降,该真菌最近在北美被引入。在病原体为地方病的欧洲和亚洲,蝙蝠仅受到轻微影响。有人提出近北极和古北极冬眠地不同的环境条件可解释疾病结果的差异,但这一假设尚未经过实验验证。我们报告了对一种耐受性欧洲蝙蝠物种(大棕蝠)对该真菌反应的首次对照实验研究。我们比较了在处理后于受控环境条件下冬眠的对照(假暴露)和暴露蝙蝠的身体状况、疾病结果和基因表达。耐受性大棕蝠的真菌生长极其有限,且未表现出白鼻综合征症状。然而,我们在暴露蝙蝠中未检测到与免疫反应相关基因的差异表达,这表明免疫反应在冬眠后期并不驱动对该真菌的耐受性。蝙蝠物种对该真菌的不同反应不能仅归因于环境或生态因素。相反,我们的结果暗示了与病原体的共同进化,并突出了“白鼻综合征转录组”的动态性质。宿主(可能还有病原体)对暴露反应的种间差异强调了在蝙蝠 - 白鼻综合征系统研究中背景的重要性,在尝试将特定蝙蝠物种用作可推广的“模型宿主”之前,应对各种宿主和病原体对暴露的遗传反应进行有力表征。