Miller Allison K, Brosnahan Cara L, Pande Anjali, Baker Cindy F, Geoghegan Jemma L, Kitson Jane, Gemmell Neil J, Dowle Edwina J
Anatomy Department, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand.
Animal Health Laboratory, Ministry for Primary Industries, Upper Hutt, New Zealand.
Mol Ecol Resour. 2025 Jul;25(5):e13805. doi: 10.1111/1755-0998.13805. Epub 2023 May 7.
Infectious diseases impact numerous organisms. Knowledge of host-pathogen interactions and host responses to infection is crucial for conservation and management. Obtaining this knowledge quickly is made increasingly possible by a variety of genomic approaches, yet, for many species the bottleneck to understanding this, remains access to appropriate samples and data. Lack of sample availability has also limited our understanding of how pathogens and the immune responses of hosts change over time. Archival materials may provide a way to explore pathogen emergence and host responses over multiple-possibly hundreds-of years. Here, we tested whether formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded (FFPE) tissue samples could be used to understand an unknown pathology, lamprey reddening syndrome (LRS), affecting pouched lampreys (Geotria australis). Our differential expression analyses of dermal tissues from four unaffected lampreys and eight affected lampreys collected in 2012 alluded to several potential agents associated with LRS. Interestingly, the pathways associated with viral infections were overrepresented in affected versus unaffected lamprey. Gene ontology analyses of the affected and non-affected lampreys also provided new insights into the largely understudied immune responses of pouched lampreys. Our work confirms that FFPE samples can be used to infer information about the transcriptional responses of a wildlife species affected by unknown historical pathologies/syndromes. In addition, the use of FFPE samples for transcriptomics offers many opportunities to investigate the genomic responses of a species to a variety of environmental changes. We conclude with a discussion about how to best sample and utilize these unique archival resources for future wildlife transcriptomic studies.
传染病会影响众多生物体。了解宿主与病原体的相互作用以及宿主对感染的反应对于保护和管理至关重要。通过各种基因组方法,越来越有可能快速获得这些知识,然而,对于许多物种来说,理解这一点的瓶颈仍然是能否获取合适的样本和数据。样本的缺乏也限制了我们对病原体以及宿主免疫反应如何随时间变化的理解。档案材料可能提供一种方法,来探究病原体的出现以及宿主在数百年间的反应。在这里,我们测试了福尔马林固定石蜡包埋(FFPE)组织样本是否可用于了解一种影响袋七鳃鳗(Geotria australis)的未知病理状况——七鳃鳗发红综合征(LRS)。我们对2012年采集的4条未受影响的七鳃鳗和8条受影响的七鳃鳗的皮肤组织进行差异表达分析,发现了几种与LRS相关的潜在病原体。有趣的是,与病毒感染相关的通路在受影响的七鳃鳗中比未受影响的七鳃鳗中更为富集。对受影响和未受影响的七鳃鳗进行基因本体分析,也为袋七鳃鳗在很大程度上未被充分研究的免疫反应提供了新的见解。我们的工作证实,FFPE样本可用于推断受未知历史病理状况/综合征影响的野生动物物种的转录反应信息。此外,将FFPE样本用于转录组学为研究物种对各种环境变化的基因组反应提供了许多机会。我们最后讨论了如何最好地采集和利用这些独特的档案资源,以用于未来的野生动物转录组学研究。