Université de Poitiers - UFR Sciences Fondamentales et Appliquées, Laboratoire Écologie et Biologie des Interactions - UMR CNRS 7267, Bâtiment B8-B35, 5 rue Albert Turpin, TSA 51106, F, 86073, POITIERS Cedex 9, France.
Université de Poitiers - UFR Sciences Fondamentales et Appliquées, Laboratoire Écologie et Biologie des Interactions - UMR CNRS 7267, Bâtiment B8-B35, 5 rue Albert Turpin, TSA 51106, F, 86073, POITIERS Cedex 9, France.
Dev Comp Immunol. 2022 Jan;126:104245. doi: 10.1016/j.dci.2021.104245. Epub 2021 Aug 25.
Growing evidence demonstrates that invertebrates display adaptive-like immune abilities, commonly known as "immune priming". Immune priming is a process by which a host improves its immune defences following an initial pathogenic exposure, leading to better protection after a subsequent infection with the same - or different - pathogens. Nevertheless, beneficial symbionts can enhance similar immune priming processes in hosts, such as when they face repeated infections with pathogens. This "symbiotic immune priming" protects the host against pathogenic viruses, bacteria, fungi, or eukaryotic parasites. In this review, we explore the extent to which protective symbionts interfere and impact immune priming against pathogens from both a mechanical (proximal) and an evolutionary (ultimate) point of view. We highlight that the immune priming of invertebrates is the cornerstone of the tripartite interaction of hosts/symbionts/pathogens. The main shared mechanism of immune priming (induced by symbionts or pathogens) is the sustained immune response at the beginning of host-microbial interactions. However, the evolutionary outcome of immune priming leads to a specific discrimination, which provides enhanced tolerance or resistance depending on the type of microbe. Based on several studies testing immune priming against pathogens in the presence or absence of protective symbionts, we observed that both types of immune priming could overlap and affect each other inside the same hosts. As protective symbionts could be an evolutionary force that influences immune priming, they may help us to better understand the heterogeneity of pathogenic immune priming across invertebrate populations and species.
越来越多的证据表明,无脊椎动物表现出适应性免疫能力,通常被称为“免疫启动”。免疫启动是宿主在初次接触病原体后提高免疫防御能力的过程,从而在随后感染相同或不同病原体时提供更好的保护。然而,有益的共生体可以增强宿主类似的免疫启动过程,例如当它们反复感染病原体时。这种“共生免疫启动”可以保护宿主免受病原体病毒、细菌、真菌或真核寄生虫的侵害。在这篇综述中,我们从机械(近端)和进化(终极)的角度探讨了保护共生体在多大程度上干扰和影响宿主对病原体的免疫启动。我们强调,无脊椎动物的免疫启动是宿主/共生体/病原体三方相互作用的基石。免疫启动的主要共同机制(由共生体或病原体诱导)是宿主与微生物相互作用开始时持续的免疫反应。然而,免疫启动的进化结果导致了特定的区分,根据微生物的类型,提供了增强的耐受性或抵抗力。基于一些在存在或不存在保护性共生体的情况下测试对病原体的免疫启动的研究,我们观察到两种类型的免疫启动都可以重叠并在同一宿主内相互影响。由于保护性共生体可能是影响免疫启动的进化力量,它们可能有助于我们更好地理解无脊椎动物种群和物种中病原体免疫启动的异质性。