Institute of Nature Conservation, Polish Academy of Sciences, Al. Adama Mickiewicza 33, 31-120, Kraków, Poland.
Department of Parasitology, Institute of Genetics and Microbiology, University of Wrocław, Przybyszewskiego 63/67, 51-148, Wroclaw, Poland.
BMC Evol Biol. 2020 Apr 16;20(1):43. doi: 10.1186/s12862-020-01610-x.
Parasites may mediate the success of biological invasions through their effect on host fitness and thus, on host population growth and stability. However, a release from the pressure of parasites is strongly related to the genetic differentiation of the host. In invasive host populations, the number of available genetic variants, allowing them to 'fight' the infection, are likely to be influenced by founder events and genetic drift. The level standing genetic variation of invasive populations may be crucial in successfully adapting to new environments and resisting diseases. We studied invasive populations of raccoon that experienced a random reduction in genetic diversity during the establishment and evaluated the relationship between host immune genetic diversity and intestinal parasites infection.
We distinguished two different genetic clusters that are characterized by different sets of functionally relevant MHC-DRB alleles. Both clusters were characterized by considerably different allele-parasite associations and different levels of parasite infection. The specific resistance MHC-DRB alleles explained the lower prevalence of Digenea parasites. An increased infection intensity was related to the presence of two MHC-DRB alleles. One of these alleles significantly decreased in frequency over time, causing a decrease of Digenea abundance in raccoons in consecutive years.
Our findings suggest that intestinal parasites can exert selective pressure on an invasive host with lowered levels of immune genetic diversity and contribute to promoting local adaptation over time. The random genetic drift that created the two different genetic clusters in the invasive raccoon range imposed completely different MHC-parasite associations, strongly associated with the infection status of populations. Our findings underline the role of standing genetic variation in shaping host-parasite relationships and provide empirical support that functional genetic variation may be, at least partly, responsible for differences in the success of invasive populations.
寄生虫可能通过影响宿主的适应性而在生物入侵中发挥作用,从而影响宿主的种群增长和稳定性。然而,寄生虫压力的释放与宿主的遗传分化密切相关。在入侵的宿主种群中,允许它们“对抗”感染的可用遗传变异数量可能受到创始事件和遗传漂变的影响。入侵种群的遗传变异水平可能是成功适应新环境和抵抗疾病的关键。我们研究了浣熊的入侵种群,这些种群在建立过程中经历了遗传多样性的随机减少,并评估了宿主免疫遗传多样性与肠道寄生虫感染之间的关系。
我们区分了两个不同的遗传聚类,它们的特点是具有不同的功能相关 MHC-DRB 等位基因。这两个聚类都具有不同的等位基因-寄生虫关联和不同的寄生虫感染水平。特定的抗性 MHC-DRB 等位基因解释了吸虫寄生虫的低流行率。感染强度的增加与 MHC-DRB 等位基因的存在有关。其中一个等位基因的频率随着时间的推移显著降低,导致浣熊在连续几年中吸虫的丰度降低。
我们的研究结果表明,肠道寄生虫可以对具有较低免疫遗传多样性的入侵宿主施加选择压力,并有助于随着时间的推移促进局部适应。在入侵浣熊的范围中创造了两个不同遗传聚类的随机遗传漂变,对种群的感染状况产生了完全不同的 MHC-寄生虫关联,强烈相关。我们的研究结果强调了遗传变异在塑造宿主-寄生虫关系方面的作用,并提供了经验支持,即功能遗传变异可能在一定程度上是入侵种群成功的原因。