Cassin-Sackett Loren, McClure Katherine M, Callicrate Taylor E, Paxton Eben H, Fleischer Robert C
Center for Conservation Genomics, Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute National Zoological Park Washington DC USA.
School of Biological Sciences University of Louisiana Lafayette USA.
Ecol Evol. 2025 Sep 3;15(9):e72078. doi: 10.1002/ece3.72078. eCollection 2025 Sep.
Introduced pathogens exert novel selection on hosts, and although many host species have experienced drastic population declines in the absence of adaptation, some hosts have adapted to highly virulent pathogens. For instance, mosquitoes and introduced to the Hawaiian Islands have resulted in extinctions and catastrophic population declines due to avian malaria, particularly in the diverse clade of Hawaiian honeycreepers. However, some species, such as the Hawai'i 'amakihi (), can survive infection. Immunity exists in low-elevation populations where mosquitoes are abundant, whereas high-elevation, unexposed populations of 'amakihi display greatly reduced immunity. To explore the basis of adaptation to in low-elevation 'amakihi, we sequenced transcriptomes from 24 low-elevation and 15 high-elevation 'amakihi. We tested for differential gene expression between (i) infected and uninfected birds and (ii) low- and high-elevation birds. Infected birds showed significant differences in expression across many transcripts with diverse cellular functions involved in different pathways of immune response; eight of the top 13 transcripts blasted to genes previously implicated in immunity to malaria in 'amakihi, and 11 have been identified in other infectious disease systems. Thirteen transcripts showed a trend of higher expression in high-elevation birds. These transcripts blasted to genes involved in metabolism, blood coagulation, and immune response. Our results provide increasing support for a subset of genes involved in immunity to malaria in 'amakihi and hint at possible antagonistic interactions between response to pathogens and environmental characteristics associated with elevation. Further work clarifying the nature of these interactions could benefit conservation efforts of Hawaiian honeycreepers in upper elevation refugia that are increasingly subject to malaria exposure.
引入的病原体对宿主施加了新的选择压力,尽管许多宿主物种在缺乏适应性的情况下经历了种群数量的急剧下降,但一些宿主已经适应了高致病性的病原体。例如,引入夏威夷群岛的蚊子导致了鸟类疟疾的灭绝和灾难性的种群数量下降,特别是在夏威夷蜜旋木雀的多样化分支中。然而,一些物种,如夏威夷绿雀(Hawai'i 'amakihi),能够在感染后存活下来。在蚊子数量丰富的低海拔种群中存在免疫力,而高海拔、未接触过病原体的夏威夷绿雀种群则表现出免疫力大大降低。为了探索低海拔夏威夷绿雀对疟疾的适应基础,我们对24只低海拔和15只高海拔夏威夷绿雀的转录组进行了测序。我们测试了(i)感染和未感染鸟类之间以及(ii)低海拔和高海拔鸟类之间的基因表达差异。感染的鸟类在许多转录本上表现出显著的表达差异,这些转录本涉及免疫反应不同途径中的多种细胞功能;前13个转录本中有8个与先前在夏威夷绿雀疟疾免疫中涉及的基因匹配,并且在其他传染病系统中鉴定出了11个。13个转录本在高海拔鸟类中呈现出更高表达的趋势。这些转录本与参与代谢、血液凝固和免疫反应的基因匹配。我们的结果为夏威夷绿雀中参与疟疾免疫的一组基因提供了越来越多的支持,并暗示了对病原体的反应与海拔相关的环境特征之间可能存在拮抗相互作用。进一步阐明这些相互作用性质的工作可能有助于保护夏威夷蜜旋木雀在海拔较高的避难所中的种群,这些避难所越来越容易受到疟疾的影响。