Centre for Ecology and Conservation, University of Exeter, Penryn Campus, Penryn, Cornwall, UK.
Groningen Institute of Evolutionary Life Sciences, University of Groningen, Nijenborgh, The Netherlands.
J Evol Biol. 2021 Apr;34(4):695-709. doi: 10.1111/jeb.13775. Epub 2021 Mar 10.
Within host populations, individuals can vary in their susceptibility to infections and in the severity and progression of disease once infected. Though mediated through differences in behaviour, resistance or tolerance, variation in disease outcomes ultimately stems from genetic and environmental (including social) factors. Despite obvious implications for the evolutionary, ecological and epidemiological dynamics of disease traits, the relative importance of these factors has rarely been quantified in naturally infected wild animal hosts. Here, we use a long-term capture-mark-recapture study of group-living European badgers (Meles meles) to characterize genetic and environmental sources of variation in host infection status by Mycobacterium bovis, the causative agent of bovine tuberculosis (bTB). We find that genetic factors contribute to M. bovis infection status, whether measured over a lifetime or across repeated captures. In the latter case, the heritability (h ) of infection status is close to zero in cubs and yearlings but increases in adulthood. Overall, environmental influences arising from a combination of social group membership (defined in time and space) and maternal effects appear to be more important than genetic factors. Thus, while genes do contribute to among-individual variation, they play a comparatively minor role, meaning that rapid evolution of host defences under parasite-mediated selection is unlikely (especially if selection is on young animals where h is lowest). Conversely, our results lend further support to the view that social and early-life environments are important drivers of the dynamics of bTB infection in badger populations specifically, and of disease traits in wild hosts more generally.
在宿主群体中,个体对感染的易感性以及感染后的疾病严重程度和进展程度可能存在差异。尽管这种差异是通过行为、抵抗力或耐受性的不同来介导的,但疾病结果的变化最终源于遗传和环境(包括社会)因素。尽管这些因素对疾病特征的进化、生态和流行病学动态具有明显的影响,但在自然感染的野生动物宿主中,这些因素的相对重要性很少被量化。在这里,我们利用对群体生活的欧洲獾(Meles meles)进行的长期捕获-标记-再捕获研究,来描述导致牛结核病(bTB)的牛分枝杆菌(Mycobacterium bovis)在宿主感染状态中的遗传和环境因素的变化。我们发现,遗传因素会影响 M. bovis 的感染状态,无论这种影响是在一生中还是在多次捕获中测量。在后一种情况下,感染状态的遗传力(h)在幼獾和一岁龄动物中接近零,但在成年后增加。总的来说,由社会群体成员身份(在时间和空间上定义)和母体效应产生的环境影响似乎比遗传因素更为重要。因此,尽管基因确实会导致个体间的变异,但它们只起相对较小的作用,这意味着寄生虫介导的选择下宿主防御的快速进化不太可能发生(特别是如果选择的是 h 值最低的幼小动物)。相反,我们的结果进一步支持了这样一种观点,即社会和早期生活环境是导致 bTB 感染在獾种群中动态变化以及野生宿主中疾病特征变化的重要驱动因素。