4.5 Article

High epigenetic potential protects songbirds against pathogenic Salmonella enterica infection

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JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY
卷 226, 期 13, 页码 -

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COMPANY BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/jeb.245475

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Epigenetics; Phenotypic plasticity; DNA methylation; Invasion; Immunology

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Animals moving into new areas face novel challenges, including pathogen exposure. DNA methylation regulates plasticity by affecting gene expression. Non-native house sparrows with high epigenetic potential (EP) in the promoter of a key microbial surveillance gene, Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4), were better able to resist pathogenic infection.
Animals encounter many novel and unpredictable challenges when moving into new areas, including pathogen exposure. Because effective immune defenses against such threats can be costly, plastic immune responses could be particularly advantageous, as such defenses can be engaged only when context warrants activation. DNA methylation is a key regulator of plasticity via its effects on gene expression. In vertebrates, DNA methylation occurs exclusively at CpG dinucleotides and, typically, high DNA methylation decreases gene expression, particularly when it occurs in promoters. The CpG content of gene regulatory regions may therefore represent one form of epigenetic potential (EP), a genomic means to enable gene expression and hence adaptive phenotypic plasticity. Non-native populations of house sparrows (Passer domesticus) - one of the world's most cosmopolitan species - have high EP in the promoter of a key microbial surveillance gene, Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4), compared with native populations. We previously hypothesized that high EP may enable sparrows to balance the costs and benefits of inflammatory immune responses well, a trait critical to success in novel environments. In the present study, we found support for this hypothesis: house sparrows with high EP in the TLR4 promoter were better able to resist a pathogenic Salmonella enterica infection than sparrows with low EP. These results support the idea that high EP contributes to invasion and perhaps adaptation in novel environments, but the mechanistic details whereby these organismal effects arise remain obscure.

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