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  4. Long term patterns of association between MHC and helminth burdens in the bank vole support Red Queen dynamics
 
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Long term patterns of association between MHC and helminth burdens in the bank vole support Red Queen dynamics

Type
Journal article
Language
English
Date issued
2022
Author
Migalska, Magdalena
Przesmycka, Karolina
Alsarraf, Mohammed
Bajer, Anna
Behnke-Borowczyk, Jolanta 
Grzybek, Maciej
Behnke, Jerzy M.
Radwan, Jacek
Faculty
Wydział Leśny i Technologii Drewna
Journal
Molecular Ecology
ISSN
0962-1083
DOI
10.1111/mec.16486
Web address
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/mec.16486
Volume
31
Number
12
Pages from-to
3400-3415
Abstract (EN)
Major histocompatibility complex (MHC) genes encode proteins crucial for adaptive immunity of vertebrates. Negative frequency-dependent selection (NFDS), resulting from adaptation of parasites to common MHC types, has been hypothesized to maintain high, functionally relevant polymorphism of MHC, but demonstration of this relationship has remained elusive. In particular, differentiation of NFDS from fluctuating selection, resulting from changes in parasite communities in time and space (FS), has proved difficult in short-term studies. Here, we used temporal data, accumulated through long-term monitoring of helminths infecting bank voles (Myodes glareolus), to test specific predictions of NFDS on MHC class II. Data were collected in three, moderately genetically differentiated subpopulations in Poland, which were characterized by some stable spatiotemporal helminth communities but also events indicating introduction of new species and loss of others. We found a complex association between individual MHC diversity and species richness, where intermediate numbers of DRB supertypes correlated with lowest species richness, but the opposite was true for DQB supertypes—arguing against universal selection for immunogenetic optimality. We also showed that particular MHC supertypes explain a portion of the variance in prevalence and abundance of helminths, but this effect was subpopulation-specific, which is consistent with both NFDS and FS. Finally, in line with NFDS, we found that certain helminths that have recently colonized or spread in a given subpopulation, more frequently or intensely infected voles with MHC supertypes that have been common in the recent past. Overall, our results highlight complex spatial and temporal patterns of MHC-parasite associations, the latter being consistent with Red Queen coevolutionary dynamics.
Keywords (EN)
  • major histocompatibility complex...

  • Myodes glareolus

  • negative frequency- dependent se...

  • Red Queen

License
cc-by-nc-ndcc-by-nc-nd CC-BY-NC-ND - Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives
Open access date
May 5, 2022
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