Barr Jordyn S, Martin Lindsay E, Tate Ann T, Hillyer Julián F
Department of Biological Sciences, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN, USA.
Immun Ageing. 2024 Sep 11;21(1):61. doi: 10.1186/s12979-024-00465-w.
Most insects are poikilotherms and ectotherms, so their body temperature is predicated by environmental temperature. With climate change, insect body temperature is rising, which affects how insects develop, survive, and respond to infection. Aging also affects insect physiology by deteriorating body condition and weakening immune proficiency via senescence. Aging is usually considered in terms of time, or chronological age, but it can also be conceptualized in terms of body function, or physiological age. We hypothesized that warmer temperature decouples chronological and physiological age in insects by accelerating senescence. To investigate this, we reared the African malaria mosquito, Anopheles gambiae, at 27 °C, 30 °C and 32 °C, and measured survival starting at 1-, 5-, 10- and 15-days of adulthood after no manipulation, injury, or a hemocoelic infection with Escherichia coli or Micrococcus luteus. Then, we measured the intensity of an E. coli infection to determine how the interaction between environmental temperature and aging shapes a mosquito's response to infection.
We demonstrate that longevity declines when a mosquito is infected with bacteria, mosquitoes have shorter lifespans when the temperature is warmer, older mosquitoes are more likely to die, and warmer temperature marginally accelerates the aging-dependent decline in survival. Furthermore, we discovered that E. coli infection intensity increases when the temperature is warmer and with aging, and that warmer temperature accelerates the aging-dependent increase in infection intensity. Finally, we uncovered that warmer temperature affects both bacterial and mosquito physiology.
Warmer environmental temperature accelerates aging in mosquitoes, negatively affecting both longevity and infection outcomes. These findings have implications for how insects will serve as pollinators, agricultural pests, and disease vectors in our warming world.
大多数昆虫是变温动物和外温动物,所以它们的体温取决于环境温度。随着气候变化,昆虫体温上升,这会影响昆虫的发育、生存以及对感染的反应。衰老也会通过恶化身体状况和因衰老削弱免疫能力来影响昆虫生理。衰老通常根据时间或实足年龄来考量,但也可以根据身体功能或生理年龄来概念化。我们假设温暖的温度会通过加速衰老使昆虫的实足年龄和生理年龄脱钩。为了对此进行研究,我们在27°C、30°C和32°C的环境下饲养非洲疟蚊冈比亚按蚊,并在未进行任何处理、受伤或经体腔感染大肠杆菌或藤黄微球菌后,于成年后的第1天、5天、10天和15天测量其存活率。然后,我们测量大肠杆菌感染的强度,以确定环境温度和衰老之间的相互作用如何塑造蚊子对感染的反应。
我们证明,当蚊子感染细菌时寿命会缩短,温度较高时蚊子的寿命较短,年龄较大的蚊子更易死亡,温暖的温度会略微加速与衰老相关的存活率下降。此外,我们发现温度较高以及随着衰老,大肠杆菌感染强度会增加,温暖的温度会加速与衰老相关的感染强度增加。最后,我们发现温暖的温度会影响细菌和蚊子的生理。
环境温度升高会加速蚊子的衰老,对寿命和感染结果均产生负面影响。这些发现对于昆虫在我们这个气候变暖的世界中作为传粉者、农业害虫和疾病传播媒介的作用具有启示意义。