Department of Biological Sciences, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN 46656, USA.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2023 Jul 31;378(1882):20220127. doi: 10.1098/rstb.2022.0127. Epub 2023 Jun 12.
Immunity changes through ontogeny and can mediate facilitative and inhibitory interactions among co-infecting parasite species. In amphibians, most immune memory is not carried through metamorphosis, leading to variation in the complexity of immune responses across life stages. To test if the ontogeny of host immunity might drive interactions among co-infecting parasites, we simultaneously exposed Cuban treefrogs () to a fungus (, Bd) and a nematode () at tadpole, metamorphic and post-metamorphic life stages. We measured metrics of host immunity, host health and parasite abundance. We predicted facilitative interactions between co-infecting parasites as the different immune responses hosts mount to combat these infectious are energetically challenging to mount simultaneously. We found ontogenetic differences in IgY levels and cellular immunity but no evidence that metamorphic frogs were more immunosuppressed than tadpoles. There was also little evidence that these parasites facilitated one another and no evidence that infection altered host immunity or health. However, Bd, which is known to be immunosuppressive, decreased immunity in metamorphic frogs. This made metamorphic frogs both less resistant and less tolerant of Bd infection than the other life stages. These findings indicate that changes in immunity altered host responses to parasite exposures throughout ontogeny. This article is part of the theme issue 'Amphibian immunity: stress, disease and ecoimmunology'.
宿主免疫的个体发育是否会影响共感染寄生虫之间的相互作用,我们通过同时将古巴树蛙暴露于真菌(, Bd)和线虫()中来检验这一点,这些寄生虫分别在蝌蚪、变态和变态后生活阶段进行感染。我们测量了宿主免疫、宿主健康和寄生虫丰度的指标。我们预测共感染寄生虫之间存在促进相互作用,因为宿主同时产生针对这些传染性疾病的不同免疫反应是具有挑战性的。我们发现 IgY 水平和细胞免疫存在个体发育差异,但没有证据表明变态期青蛙比蝌蚪更受免疫抑制。也几乎没有证据表明这些寄生虫相互促进,也没有证据表明感染改变了宿主的免疫或健康。然而,众所周知具有免疫抑制作用的 Bd 降低了变态期青蛙的免疫力。这使得变态期青蛙对 Bd 感染的抵抗力和耐受性都低于其他生命阶段。这些发现表明,免疫的变化改变了宿主对整个个体发育过程中寄生虫暴露的反应。本文是主题为“两栖动物免疫:应激、疾病和生态免疫学”的一部分。