Selechnik Daniel, Richardson Mark F, Shine Richard, Brown Gregory P, Rollins Lee Ann
School of Life and Environmental Sciences (SOLES) University of Sydney Sydney New South Wales Australia.
Deakin Genomics Centre, School of Life and Environmental Sciences Deakin University Geelong Victoria Australia.
Ecol Evol. 2019 May 9;9(11):6708-6721. doi: 10.1002/ece3.5249. eCollection 2019 Jun.
Host-pathogen associations change rapidly during a biological invasion and are predicted to impose strong selection on immune function. It has been proposed that the invader may experience an abrupt reduction in pathogen-mediated selection ("enemy release"), thereby favoring decreased investment into "costly" immune responses. Across plants and animals, there is mixed support for this prediction. Pathogens are not the only form of selection imposed on invaders; differences in abiotic environmental conditions between native and introduced ranges are also expected to drive rapid evolution. Here, we use RNA-Seq to assess the expression patterns of immune and environmentally associated genes in the cane toad () across its invasive Australian range. Transcripts encoding mediators of costly immune responses (inflammation, cytotoxicity) showed a curvilinear relationship with invasion history, with highest expression in toads from oldest and newest colonized areas. This pattern is surprising given theoretical expectations of density dynamics in invasive species and may be because density influences both intraspecific competition and parasite transmission, generating conflicting effects on the strength of immune responses. Alternatively, this expression pattern may be the result of other evolutionary forces, such as spatial sorting and genetic drift, working simultaneously with natural selection. Our findings do not support predictions about immune function based on the enemy release hypothesis and suggest instead that the effects of enemy release are difficult to isolate in wild populations, especially in the absence of information regarding parasite and pathogen infection. Additionally, expression patterns of genes underlying putatively environmentally associated traits are consistent with previous genetic studies, providing further support that Australian cane toads have adapted to novel abiotic challenges.
在生物入侵过程中,宿主与病原体的关联变化迅速,预计会对免疫功能施加强烈的选择压力。有人提出,入侵者可能会经历病原体介导的选择突然减少(“敌人释放”),从而有利于减少对“代价高昂”的免疫反应的投入。在植物和动物中,这一预测得到了不同程度的支持。病原体并不是对入侵者施加选择的唯一形式;原生地和引入地之间非生物环境条件的差异也预计会推动快速进化。在这里,我们使用RNA测序来评估蔗蟾蜍()在其入侵的澳大利亚范围内免疫相关基因和环境相关基因的表达模式。编码代价高昂的免疫反应(炎症、细胞毒性)介质的转录本与入侵历史呈现出曲线关系,在最早和最新殖民地区的蟾蜍中表达最高。考虑到入侵物种密度动态的理论预期,这种模式令人惊讶,可能是因为密度既影响种内竞争又影响寄生虫传播,对免疫反应强度产生相互冲突的影响。或者,这种表达模式可能是其他进化力量的结果,如空间分选和遗传漂变,与自然选择同时起作用。我们的研究结果不支持基于敌人释放假说对免疫功能的预测,相反表明在野生种群中很难分离出敌人释放的影响,尤其是在缺乏关于寄生虫和病原体感染信息的情况下。此外,假定与环境相关性状的潜在基因的表达模式与先前的遗传研究一致,进一步支持了澳大利亚蔗蟾蜍已经适应了新的非生物挑战这一观点。