Diet driven differences in host tolerance are linked to shifts in global gene expression in a common avian host-pathogen system

Erin L Sauer, Carson Stacy, Weston Perrine, Ashley C Love, Jeffrey A Lewis, Sarah E DuRant
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Abstract

As humans alter the landscape, wildlife have become increasingly dependent on anthropogenic resources, altering interactions between individuals and subsequently disease transmission dynamics. Further, nutritional quantity and quality greatly impact an individual hosts immune capacity and ability to mitigate damage caused by infectious disease. Thus, understanding the impact of dietary nutrition on immune function is critical for predicting disease severity and transmission as human activity both facilitates the dispersal of pathogens and alters dietary options for wildlife. Here, we use transcriptomics to explore the previously unstudied molecular mechanisms underpinning diet-driven differences in pathogen tolerance using a widespread avian bacterial pathogen, Mycoplasma gallisepticum (MG). MG is an ideal model for understanding the dietary drivers of disease as the human supplementation that wild birds commonly rely on, bird feeders, are also an important source for MG transmission. Significant diet-driven differences in the expression of many genes encoding immune response and translational machinery proteins are seen both in the absence of MG and during the recovery period. Prior to infection, protein-fed birds are more transcriptionally primed for infection than lipid-fed birds which translates to greater tolerance in protein-fed birds during the recovery period. Given the significant importance of human supplemented food in wildlife disease systems, the molecular mechanisms by which interactions between diet and infection emerge provide insight into the ecological and immunological consequences of human behavior and wildlife disease.
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饮食驱动的宿主耐受性差异与常见禽类宿主-病原体系统中全局基因表达的变化有关
随着人类对地貌的改变,野生动物对人为资源的依赖性越来越强,从而改变了个体之间的相互作用,进而改变了疾病的传播动态。此外,营养的数量和质量在很大程度上影响着宿主个体的免疫能力和减轻传染病损害的能力。因此,了解膳食营养对免疫功能的影响对于预测疾病的严重程度和传播至关重要,因为人类活动既促进了病原体的传播,也改变了野生动物的膳食选择。在这里,我们利用转录组学来探索以前未研究过的分子机制,即利用一种广泛存在的禽类细菌病原体--五倍子支原体(MG)来研究饮食驱动的病原体耐受性差异。五倍子支原体是了解疾病饮食驱动因素的理想模型,因为野鸟通常依赖的人类补充食物--喂鸟器也是五倍子支原体传播的重要来源。许多编码免疫反应和翻译机制蛋白的基因在没有感染 MG 时和恢复期间的表达都存在明显的饮食驱动差异。在感染之前,蛋白质喂养的鸟类比脂肪喂养的鸟类在转录上更容易受到感染,这就意味着蛋白质喂养的鸟类在恢复期间具有更强的耐受性。鉴于人类补充食物在野生动物疾病系统中的重要性,饮食与感染之间相互作用的分子机制为人类行为和野生动物疾病的生态学和免疫学后果提供了启示。
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