Martyka Rafał, Śliwińska Ewa B, Martyka Mirosław, Cichoń Mariusz, Tryjanowski Piotr
1Institute of Nature Conservation, Polish Academy of Sciences, Mickiewicza 33, 31-120 Kraków, Poland.
2Institute of Environmental Sciences, Jagiellonian University, Gronostajowa 7, 30-387 Kraków, Poland.
Front Zool. 2018 Jun 19;15:25. doi: 10.1186/s12983-018-0272-y. eCollection 2018.
Prenatal antibody transfer is an immune-mediated maternal effect by which females can shape postnatal offspring resistance to pathogens and parasites. Maternal antibodies passed on to offspring provide primary protection to neonates against diverse pathogenic antigens, but they may also affect offspring growth and influence the development of an offspring's own immune response. The effects of maternal antibodies on offspring performance commonly require that the disease environment experienced by a mother prior to breeding matches the environment encountered by her offspring after hatching/birth. However, other circumstances, like postnatal rearing conditions that affect offspring food availability, may also determine the effects of maternal antibodies on offspring growth and immunity. To date, knowledge about how prenatal immune-mediated maternal effects interact with various postnatal rearing conditions to affect offspring development and phenotype in wild bird population remains elusive. Here we experimentally studied the interactive effects of pre-laying maternal immunization with a bacterial antigen (lipopolysaccharide) and post-hatching rearing conditions, altered by brood size manipulation, on offspring growth and humoral immunity of wild great tits ().
We found that maternal immunization and brood size manipulation interactively affected the growth and specific humoral immune response of avian offspring. Among nestlings reared in enlarged broods, only those that originated from immunized mothers grew better and were heavier at fledging stage compared to those that originated from non-immunized mothers. In contrast, no such effects were observed among nestlings reared in non-manipulated (control) broods. Moreover, offspring of immunized females had a stronger humoral immune response to lipopolysaccharide during postnatal development than offspring of non-immunized females, but only when the nestling was reared in control broods.
This study demonstrates that offspring development and their ability to cope with pathogens after hatching are driven by mutual influences of pathogen-induced prenatal maternal effects and post-hatching rearing conditions. Our findings suggest that immune-mediated maternal effects may have context-dependent influences on offspring growth and immune function, related to the postnatal environmental conditions experienced by the progeny.
产前抗体转移是一种免疫介导的母体效应,雌性通过这种效应可以塑造产后子代对病原体和寄生虫的抵抗力。传递给子代的母体抗体为新生儿提供了针对多种致病抗原的初级保护,但它们也可能影响子代的生长,并影响子代自身免疫反应的发展。母体抗体对子代表现的影响通常要求母亲在繁殖前经历的疾病环境与子代孵化/出生后遇到的环境相匹配。然而,其他情况,如影响子代食物供应的产后饲养条件,也可能决定母体抗体对子代生长和免疫的影响。迄今为止,关于产前免疫介导的母体效应如何与各种产后饲养条件相互作用,以影响野生鸟类种群中的子代发育和表型,仍不清楚。在这里,我们通过实验研究了产前用细菌抗原(脂多糖)对母体进行免疫以及孵化后饲养条件(通过操纵育雏规模改变)对野生大山雀子代生长和体液免疫的交互作用。
我们发现母体免疫和育雏规模操纵对鸟类子代的生长和特异性体液免疫反应有交互影响。在扩大育雏规模饲养的雏鸟中,只有那些来自免疫母亲的雏鸟在 fledging 阶段比来自未免疫母亲的雏鸟生长得更好且体重更重。相比之下,在未操纵(对照)育雏规模饲养的雏鸟中未观察到此类影响。此外,免疫雌性的子代在产后发育期间对脂多糖的体液免疫反应比未免疫雌性的子代更强,但仅当雏鸟在对照育雏规模中饲养时才如此。
本研究表明,子代发育及其孵化后应对病原体的能力是由病原体诱导的产前母体效应和孵化后饲养条件的相互影响驱动的。我们的研究结果表明,免疫介导的母体效应可能对后代生长和免疫功能具有与子代所经历的产后环境条件相关的背景依赖性影响。