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A fruit diet rather than invertebrate diet maintains a robust innate immunity in an omnivorous tropical songbird

1. Diet alteration may lead to nutrient limitations even in the absence of food limitation, and this may affect physiological functions, including immunity. Nutrient limitations may also affect the maintenance of body mass and key life‐history events that may affect immune function. Yet, variation i...

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Autores principales: Nwaogu, Chima J., Galema, Annabet, Cresswell, Will, Dietz, Maurine W., Tieleman, B. Irene
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7079115/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31764994
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1365-2656.13152
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author Nwaogu, Chima J.
Galema, Annabet
Cresswell, Will
Dietz, Maurine W.
Tieleman, B. Irene
author_facet Nwaogu, Chima J.
Galema, Annabet
Cresswell, Will
Dietz, Maurine W.
Tieleman, B. Irene
author_sort Nwaogu, Chima J.
collection PubMed
description 1. Diet alteration may lead to nutrient limitations even in the absence of food limitation, and this may affect physiological functions, including immunity. Nutrient limitations may also affect the maintenance of body mass and key life‐history events that may affect immune function. Yet, variation in immune function is largely attributed to energetic trade‐offs rather than specific nutrient constraints. 2. To test the effect of diet on life‐history traits, we tested how diet composition affects innate immune function, body mass and moult separately and in combination with each other, and then used path analyses to generate hypotheses about the mechanistic connections between immunity and body mass under different diet compositions. 3. We performed a balanced parallel and crossover design experiment with omnivorous common bulbuls Pycnonotus barbatus in out‐door aviaries in Nigeria. We fed 40 wild‐caught bulbuls ad libitum on fruits or invertebrates for 24 weeks, switching half of each group between treatments after 12 weeks. We assessed innate immune indices (haptoglobin, nitric oxide and ovotransferrin concentrations, and haemagglutination and haemolysis titres), body mass and primary moult, fortnightly. We simplified immune indices into three principal components (PCs), but we explored mechanistic connections between diet, body mass and each immune index separately. 4. Fruit‐fed bulbuls had higher body mass, earlier moult and showed higher values for two of the three immune PCs compared to invertebrate‐fed bulbuls. These effects were reversed when we switched bulbuls between treatments after 12 weeks. Exploring the correlations between immune function, body mass and moult, showed that an increase in immune function was associated with a decrease in body mass and delayed moult in invertebrate‐fed bulbuls, while fruit‐fed bulbuls maintained body mass despite variation in immune function. Path analyses indicated that diet composition was most likely to affect body mass and immune indices directly and independently from each other. Only haptoglobin concentration was indirectly linked to diet composition via body mass. 5. We demonstrated a causal effect of diet composition on innate immune function, body mass and moult: bulbuls were in a better condition when fed on fruits than invertebrates, confirming that innate immunity is nutrient specific. Our results are unique because they show a reversible effect of diet composition on wild adult birds whose immune systems are presumably fully developed and adapted to wild conditions—demonstrating a short‐term consequence of diet alteration on life‐history traits.
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spelling pubmed-70791152020-03-19 A fruit diet rather than invertebrate diet maintains a robust innate immunity in an omnivorous tropical songbird Nwaogu, Chima J. Galema, Annabet Cresswell, Will Dietz, Maurine W. Tieleman, B. Irene J Anim Ecol Physiological Ecology 1. Diet alteration may lead to nutrient limitations even in the absence of food limitation, and this may affect physiological functions, including immunity. Nutrient limitations may also affect the maintenance of body mass and key life‐history events that may affect immune function. Yet, variation in immune function is largely attributed to energetic trade‐offs rather than specific nutrient constraints. 2. To test the effect of diet on life‐history traits, we tested how diet composition affects innate immune function, body mass and moult separately and in combination with each other, and then used path analyses to generate hypotheses about the mechanistic connections between immunity and body mass under different diet compositions. 3. We performed a balanced parallel and crossover design experiment with omnivorous common bulbuls Pycnonotus barbatus in out‐door aviaries in Nigeria. We fed 40 wild‐caught bulbuls ad libitum on fruits or invertebrates for 24 weeks, switching half of each group between treatments after 12 weeks. We assessed innate immune indices (haptoglobin, nitric oxide and ovotransferrin concentrations, and haemagglutination and haemolysis titres), body mass and primary moult, fortnightly. We simplified immune indices into three principal components (PCs), but we explored mechanistic connections between diet, body mass and each immune index separately. 4. Fruit‐fed bulbuls had higher body mass, earlier moult and showed higher values for two of the three immune PCs compared to invertebrate‐fed bulbuls. These effects were reversed when we switched bulbuls between treatments after 12 weeks. Exploring the correlations between immune function, body mass and moult, showed that an increase in immune function was associated with a decrease in body mass and delayed moult in invertebrate‐fed bulbuls, while fruit‐fed bulbuls maintained body mass despite variation in immune function. Path analyses indicated that diet composition was most likely to affect body mass and immune indices directly and independently from each other. Only haptoglobin concentration was indirectly linked to diet composition via body mass. 5. We demonstrated a causal effect of diet composition on innate immune function, body mass and moult: bulbuls were in a better condition when fed on fruits than invertebrates, confirming that innate immunity is nutrient specific. Our results are unique because they show a reversible effect of diet composition on wild adult birds whose immune systems are presumably fully developed and adapted to wild conditions—demonstrating a short‐term consequence of diet alteration on life‐history traits. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2020-01-03 2020-03 /pmc/articles/PMC7079115/ /pubmed/31764994 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1365-2656.13152 Text en © 2019 The Authors. Journal of Animal Ecology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of British Ecological Society. This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Physiological Ecology
Nwaogu, Chima J.
Galema, Annabet
Cresswell, Will
Dietz, Maurine W.
Tieleman, B. Irene
A fruit diet rather than invertebrate diet maintains a robust innate immunity in an omnivorous tropical songbird
title A fruit diet rather than invertebrate diet maintains a robust innate immunity in an omnivorous tropical songbird
title_full A fruit diet rather than invertebrate diet maintains a robust innate immunity in an omnivorous tropical songbird
title_fullStr A fruit diet rather than invertebrate diet maintains a robust innate immunity in an omnivorous tropical songbird
title_full_unstemmed A fruit diet rather than invertebrate diet maintains a robust innate immunity in an omnivorous tropical songbird
title_short A fruit diet rather than invertebrate diet maintains a robust innate immunity in an omnivorous tropical songbird
title_sort fruit diet rather than invertebrate diet maintains a robust innate immunity in an omnivorous tropical songbird
topic Physiological Ecology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7079115/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31764994
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1365-2656.13152
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