School of Biological Sciences and Centre for Geometric Biology, Monash University, Melbourne, Vic., Australia.
J Evol Biol. 2020 Sep;33(9):1224-1234. doi: 10.1111/jeb.13663. Epub 2020 Jun 26.
Global change is shifting both temperature patterns and the geographic distribution of pathogens, and infection has already been shown to substantially reduce host thermal performance, potentially placing populations at greater risk that previously thought. But what about individuals that are able to successfully clear an infection? Whilst the direct damage a pathogen causes will likely lead to reductions in host's thermal tolerance, the response to infection often shares many underlying pathways with the general stress response, potentially acting as a buffer against subsequent thermal stress. Here, by exposing Drosophila melanogaster to heat-killed bacterial pathogens, we investigate how activation of a host's immune system can modify any response to both heat and cold temperature stress. In a single focal population, we find that immune activation can improve a host's knockdown times during heat shock, potentially offsetting some of the damage that would subsequently arise as an infection progresses. Conversely, immune activation had a detrimental effect on CT and did not influence lower thermal tolerance as measured by chill-coma recovery time. However, we also find that the influence of immune activation on heat knockdown times is not generalizable across an entire cline of locally adapted populations. Instead, immune activation led to signals of local adaptation to temperature being lost, erasing the previous advantage that populations in warmer regions had when challenged with heat stress. Our results suggest that activation of the immune system may help buffer individuals against the detrimental impact of infection on thermal tolerance; however, any response will be population specific and potentially not easily predicted across larger geographic scales, and dependent on the form of thermal stress faced by a host.
全球变化正在改变温度模式和病原体的地理分布,感染已经被证明会极大地降低宿主的热性能,使种群面临的风险比以前想象的更大。但是,对于那些能够成功清除感染的个体呢?虽然病原体直接造成的损害可能导致宿主的热耐受性降低,但感染的反应通常与一般的应激反应有许多共同的潜在途径,可能作为对随后的热应激的缓冲。在这里,我们通过使黑腹果蝇暴露于热灭活的细菌病原体来研究宿主免疫系统的激活如何改变对热和冷温度应激的反应。在一个单一的焦点种群中,我们发现免疫激活可以提高宿主在热休克期间的击倒时间,可能抵消随后感染进展所带来的一些损害。相反,免疫激活对 CT 有不利影响,并且不影响由冷休克恢复时间测量的较低热耐受性。然而,我们还发现,免疫激活对热击倒时间的影响不是普遍适用于整个局部适应种群的连续体。相反,免疫激活导致对温度的本地适应信号丢失,消除了先前温暖地区种群在受到热应激挑战时所具有的优势。我们的研究结果表明,免疫系统的激活可能有助于缓冲个体免受感染对热耐受性的不利影响;然而,任何反应都将是特定于种群的,并且在较大的地理范围内可能不容易预测,并且取决于宿主面临的热应激形式。