| Literature DB >> 30701351 |
Joanna Sudyka1,2, Edyta Podmokła3, Szymon M Drobniak3, Anna Dubiec4, Aneta Arct3, Lars Gustafsson5, Mariusz Cichoń3.
Abstract
Parasitic infections potentially drive host's life-histories since they can have detrimental effects on host's fitness. Telomere dynamics is a candidate mechanism to underlie life-history trade-offs and as such may correlate with observed fitness reduction in infected animals. We examined the relationship of chronic infection with two genera of haemosporidians causing avian malaria and malaria-like disease with host's telomere length (TL) in a longitudinal study of free-ranging blue tits. The observed overall infection prevalence was 80% and increased with age, constituting a potentially serious selective pressure in our population. We found longer telomeres in individuals infected with a parasite causing lesser blood pathologies i.e. Haemoproteus compared to Plasmodium genus, but this only held true among males. Female TL was independent of the infection type. Our results indicate that parasitic infections could bring about other types of costs to females than to males with respect to TL. Additionally, we detected linear telomere loss with age, however a random regression analysis did not confirm significant heterogeneity in TL of first breeders and telomere shortening rates in further life.Entities:
Keywords: Avian malaria; Bird; Chronic infection; Parasitaemia; Random regression
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30701351 PMCID: PMC6353807 DOI: 10.1007/s00114-019-1601-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Naturwissenschaften ISSN: 0028-1042
General linear mixed model explaining the effects of age, sex, and malaria infection type on telomere length in blue tit individuals (each sampled 2 to 4 times in yearly intervals). Significant fixed effects (P < 0.05) and components for random effect structure (Z ratio ≥ 1.96) marked in italics
| Fixed effects | Estimates ± SE | Z ratio | df |
| |
| Intercept | 0.236 ± 0.045 | 5.292 | 1, 18.0 | 67.530 |
|
| Age | − 0.043 ± 0.014 | − 3.129 | 1, 56.7 | 9.788 |
|
| Sex | 0.143 ± 0.056 | 2.570 | 1, 104.2 | 0.683 | 0.410 |
| Infection type | 0.007 ± 0.040 | 0.180 | 2, 220.2 | 1.860 | 0.158 |
| Sex × infection type | 2, 219.5 | 3.348 |
| ||
| Male × none | − 0.116 ± 0.071 | − 1.628 | |||
| Male × | − 0.163 ± 0.063 | − 2.586 | |||
| Random effects | Component ± SE | ||||
| Individual intercepts (first breeder TL) | 0.003 ± 0.003 | 1.114 | |||
| Individual slopes (TL loss with age) | 0.001 ± 0.001 | 1.137 | |||
| Nest id | 0.002 ± 0.007 | 0.275 | |||
| Year | 0.004 ± 0.004 | 1.192 | |||
| Plate id | 0.006 ± 0.003 |
| |||
| Residual variance | 0.018 ± 0.007 | 2.427 | |||
Fig. 1Telomere loss in relation to age in the blue tit. Individual regression lines (N = 111 individuals, sampled 2 to 4 times) represented in colours, dots represent sampling events. Overall regression line ± SE (pooled for all individuals) shown in black on raw data
Fig. 2Relative telomere length [the ratio (T/S) of telomere copy number (T) and single control gene copy (S) in females (dark grey bars) and males (light grey bars) according to infection type. Raw data ± SE are shown. Differences among groups (non-adjusted P values) according to the post hoc pairwise mean difference test with Holm false-positive rate discovery correction