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An Immunological Marker of Tolerance to Infection in Wild Rodents

Hosts are likely to respond to parasitic infections by a combination of resistance (expulsion of pathogens) and tolerance (active mitigation of pathology). Of these strategies, the basis of tolerance in animal hosts is relatively poorly understood, with especially little known about how tolerance is...

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Autores principales: Jackson, Joseph A., Hall, Amy J., Friberg, Ida M., Ralli, Catriona, Lowe, Ann, Zawadzka, Malgorzata, Turner, Andrew K., Stewart, Alexander, Birtles, Richard J., Paterson, Steve, Bradley, Janette E., Begon, Mike
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4086718/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25004450
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.1001901
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author Jackson, Joseph A.
Hall, Amy J.
Friberg, Ida M.
Ralli, Catriona
Lowe, Ann
Zawadzka, Malgorzata
Turner, Andrew K.
Stewart, Alexander
Birtles, Richard J.
Paterson, Steve
Bradley, Janette E.
Begon, Mike
author_facet Jackson, Joseph A.
Hall, Amy J.
Friberg, Ida M.
Ralli, Catriona
Lowe, Ann
Zawadzka, Malgorzata
Turner, Andrew K.
Stewart, Alexander
Birtles, Richard J.
Paterson, Steve
Bradley, Janette E.
Begon, Mike
author_sort Jackson, Joseph A.
collection PubMed
description Hosts are likely to respond to parasitic infections by a combination of resistance (expulsion of pathogens) and tolerance (active mitigation of pathology). Of these strategies, the basis of tolerance in animal hosts is relatively poorly understood, with especially little known about how tolerance is manifested in natural populations. We monitored a natural population of field voles using longitudinal and cross-sectional sampling modes and taking measurements on body condition, infection, immune gene expression, and survival. Using analyses stratified by life history stage, we demonstrate a pattern of tolerance to macroparasites in mature compared to immature males. In comparison to immature males, mature males resisted infection less and instead increased investment in body condition in response to accumulating burdens, but at the expense of reduced reproductive effort. We identified expression of the transcription factor Gata3 (a mediator of Th2 immunity) as an immunological biomarker of this tolerance response. Time series data for individual animals suggested that macroparasite infections gave rise to increased expression of Gata3, which gave rise to improved body condition and enhanced survival as hosts aged. These findings provide a clear and unexpected insight into tolerance responses (and their life history sequelae) in a natural vertebrate population. The demonstration that such responses (potentially promoting parasite transmission) can move from resistance to tolerance through the course of an individual's lifetime emphasises the need to incorporate them into our understanding of the dynamics and risk of infection in the natural environment. Moreover, the identification of Gata3 as a marker of tolerance to macroparasites raises important new questions regarding the role of Th2 immunity and the mechanistic nature of the tolerance response itself. A more manipulative, experimental approach is likely to be valuable in elaborating this further.
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spelling pubmed-40867182014-07-14 An Immunological Marker of Tolerance to Infection in Wild Rodents Jackson, Joseph A. Hall, Amy J. Friberg, Ida M. Ralli, Catriona Lowe, Ann Zawadzka, Malgorzata Turner, Andrew K. Stewart, Alexander Birtles, Richard J. Paterson, Steve Bradley, Janette E. Begon, Mike PLoS Biol Research Article Hosts are likely to respond to parasitic infections by a combination of resistance (expulsion of pathogens) and tolerance (active mitigation of pathology). Of these strategies, the basis of tolerance in animal hosts is relatively poorly understood, with especially little known about how tolerance is manifested in natural populations. We monitored a natural population of field voles using longitudinal and cross-sectional sampling modes and taking measurements on body condition, infection, immune gene expression, and survival. Using analyses stratified by life history stage, we demonstrate a pattern of tolerance to macroparasites in mature compared to immature males. In comparison to immature males, mature males resisted infection less and instead increased investment in body condition in response to accumulating burdens, but at the expense of reduced reproductive effort. We identified expression of the transcription factor Gata3 (a mediator of Th2 immunity) as an immunological biomarker of this tolerance response. Time series data for individual animals suggested that macroparasite infections gave rise to increased expression of Gata3, which gave rise to improved body condition and enhanced survival as hosts aged. These findings provide a clear and unexpected insight into tolerance responses (and their life history sequelae) in a natural vertebrate population. The demonstration that such responses (potentially promoting parasite transmission) can move from resistance to tolerance through the course of an individual's lifetime emphasises the need to incorporate them into our understanding of the dynamics and risk of infection in the natural environment. Moreover, the identification of Gata3 as a marker of tolerance to macroparasites raises important new questions regarding the role of Th2 immunity and the mechanistic nature of the tolerance response itself. A more manipulative, experimental approach is likely to be valuable in elaborating this further. Public Library of Science 2014-07-08 /pmc/articles/PMC4086718/ /pubmed/25004450 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.1001901 Text en © 2014 Jackson et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Jackson, Joseph A.
Hall, Amy J.
Friberg, Ida M.
Ralli, Catriona
Lowe, Ann
Zawadzka, Malgorzata
Turner, Andrew K.
Stewart, Alexander
Birtles, Richard J.
Paterson, Steve
Bradley, Janette E.
Begon, Mike
An Immunological Marker of Tolerance to Infection in Wild Rodents
title An Immunological Marker of Tolerance to Infection in Wild Rodents
title_full An Immunological Marker of Tolerance to Infection in Wild Rodents
title_fullStr An Immunological Marker of Tolerance to Infection in Wild Rodents
title_full_unstemmed An Immunological Marker of Tolerance to Infection in Wild Rodents
title_short An Immunological Marker of Tolerance to Infection in Wild Rodents
title_sort immunological marker of tolerance to infection in wild rodents
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4086718/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25004450
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.1001901
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