| Literature DB >> 28875066 |
Barbara Lukasch1, Helena Westerdahl2, Maria Strandh2, Hans Winkler1, Yoshan Moodley1,3, Felix Knauer4, Herbert Hoi1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A well-functioning immune defence is crucial for fitness, but our knowledge about the immune system and its complex interactions is still limited. Major histocompatibility complex (MHC) molecules are involved in T-cell mediated adaptive immune responses, but MHC is also highly upregulated during the initial innate immune response. The aim of our study was therefore to determine to what extent the highly polymorphic MHC is involved in interactions of the innate and adaptive immune defence and if specific functional MHC alleles (FA) or heterozygosity at the MHC are more important.Entities:
Keywords: Cell-mediated immunity; Humoral immunity; Innate immunity; MHC diversity; Passer domesticus
Year: 2017 PMID: 28875066 PMCID: PMC5581531 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.3679
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Schematic presentation of the experimental design.
| Schedule | Group 1 + 2 ( | Group 1 ( | Group 2 ( |
|---|---|---|---|
| ( | ( | ( | |
| 2012 (Spring) | |||
| - Day 0 | PHA injection (nestlings) + Body measurements | ||
| - Day 1 | PHA response | ||
| 2013 (July) | |||
| - Day 0 | Blood (100 µl) + Body measurements + HCT + ESR + H/L + BKA | 1st PHA injection | SRBC injection |
| - Day 1 | 1st PHA response | ||
| - Day 7 | 2nd PHA injection + Body mass | ||
| - Day 8 | 2nd PHA response | Blood (100 µl) + Body mass + SRBC (Agglutination) | |
Immune tests used correspond to the innate and adaptive (cell-mediated and humoral) immune response.
| Immune tests | Age class (year) | Innate immunity | Adaptive immunity | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cell-mediated | Humoral | |||
| HCT | 1 | X | ||
| ESR | 1 | X | ||
| H/L | 1 | X | X | |
| BKA | 1 | X | ||
| PHA (nestling) | 0 | X | X | |
| PHA (1st response) | 1 | X | X | |
| PHA (2nd response) | 1 | X | X | |
| SRBC | 1 | X | ||
Figure 1Frequency distribution of the 59 functional MHC class I alleles and cut-off point for the ten most common alleles used in the analysis (Frequency >10%).
Figure 2Innate immunity: (A) Relationship between the FA ‘FA09776’ and ESR (log-transformed), (B) Relationship between the FA ‘FA09776’ and HCT, (C) Relationship between the FAs ‘FA09776’ and ‘FA25663’ and BKA.
Figure 3Innate and adaptive (cell-mediated) immunity: (A) Relationship between the FA ‘FA00217’ and H/L ratio (log-transformed), (B) Relationship between the FA ‘FA09776’ and PHA response in nestlings, (C) Relationship between the number of different FA per individual and the second PHA response in adults, (D) Relationship between the FA ‘FA23304’ and the second PHA response in adults, (E) PHA response in nestlings and adults (first and second response).
Figure 4Adaptive (humoral) immunity: relationship between the FA ‘FA18621’ and SRBC.
Principal-component loadings after varimax rotation for seven different measures of innate and adaptive immunity (group 1, N = 64).
ESR, HCT and H/L correlate with PC1 (26.2% of total variation), PHA in nestlings and BKA correlate with PC2 (18% of total variation) and PHA first and second response in adults correlate with PC3 (18% of total variation).
| PC1 | PC2 | PC3 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| PHA (nestlings) | −0.022 | 0.006 | |
| HCT | 0.104 | −0.207 | |
| H/L | −0.216 | −0.269 | |
| BKA | 0.038 | 0.051 | |
| PHA (adults) 1st response | 0.136 | −0.164 | |
| PHA (adults) 2nd response | −0.074 | 0.103 | |
| ESR | 0.193 | 0.071 | |
| Variance per component (%) | 26.238 | 18.741 | 18.055 |
| Cummulative variance (%) | 26.238 | 44.978 | 63.034 |