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Non-MHC immunity genes do not affect parasite load in European invasive populations of common raccoon

Autor
Kloch, Agnieszka
Konopiński, Maciej
Biedrzycka, Aleksandra
Bartoszewicz, Magdalena
Zawiślak, Marlena
Popiołek, Marcin
Data publikacji
2023
Abstrakt (EN)

Understanding the evolutionary mechanisms behind invasion success enables predicting which alien species and populations are the most predisposed to become invasive. Parasites may mediate the success of biological invasions through their effect on host fitness. The evolution of increased competitive ability (EICA) hypothesis assumes that escape from parasites during the invasion process allows introduced species to decrease investment in immunity and allocate resources to dispersal and reproduction. Consequently, the selective pressure of parasites on host species in the invasive range should be relaxed. We used the case of the raccoon Procyon lotor invasion in Europe to investigate the effect of gastrointestinal pathogen pressure on non‑MHC immune genetic diversity of newly established invasive populations. Despite distinct differences in parasite prevalence between analysed populations, we detected only marginal associations between two analysed SNPs and infection intensity. We argue that the differences in parasite prevalence are better explained by detected earlier associations with specific MHC‑DRB alleles. While the escape from native parasites seems to allow decreased investment in overall immunity, which relaxes selective pressure imposed on immune genes, a wide range of MHC variants maintained in the invasive range may protect from newly encountered parasites.

Dyscyplina PBN
nauki biologiczne
Czasopismo
Scientific Reports
Tom
13
Zeszyt
1
Strony od-do
1-9
ISSN
2045-2322
Data udostępnienia w otwartym dostępie
2023-09-21
Licencja otwartego dostępu
Uznanie autorstwa