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1.
Biol Lett ; 20(3): 20230548, 2024 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38471567

RESUMO

During pregnancy, the mammalian immune system must simultaneously protect against pathogens while being accommodating to the foreign fetal tissues. Our current understanding of this immune modulation derives predominantly from industrialized human populations and laboratory animals. However, their environments differ considerably from the pathogen-rich, resource-scarce environments in which pregnancy and the immune system co-evolved. For a better understanding of immune modulation during pregnancy in challenging environments, we measured urinary neopterin, a biomarker of cell-mediated immune responses, in 10 wild female bonobos (Pan paniscus) before, during and after pregnancy. Bonobos, sharing evolutionary roots and pregnancy characteristics with humans, serve as an ideal model for such investigation. Despite distinct environments, we hypothesized that cell-mediated immune modulation during pregnancy is similar between bonobos and humans. As predicted, neopterin levels were higher during than outside of pregnancy, and highest in the third trimester, with a significant decline post-partum. Our findings suggest shared mechanisms of cell-mediated immune modulation during pregnancy in bonobos and humans that are robust despite distinct environmental conditions. We propose that these patterns indicate shared immunological processes during pregnancy among hominins, and possibly other primates. This finding enhances our understanding of reproductive immunology.


Assuntos
Imunidade Celular , Pan paniscus , Gravidez , Animais , Humanos , Feminino , Pan paniscus/fisiologia , Neopterina , Evolução Biológica , Pan troglodytes , Mamíferos
2.
Ecohealth ; 20(1): 93-104, 2023 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37184594

RESUMO

As environmental changes exacerbate the threat coming from infectious diseases in wild mammal species, monitoring their health and gaining a better understanding of the immune functioning at the species level have become critically important. Neopterin is a biomarker of cell-mediated immune responses to intracellular infections. We investigated the variation of urinary neopterin (uNeo) levels of wild, habituated bonobos (Pan paniscus) in relation to individual and environmental factors. We used 309 urine samples collected between 2010 and 2018 at the LuiKotale field site, DRC. Based on current knowledge on zoo-housed conspecifics and closely related species, we predicted uNeo levels to increase (1) during infections, (2) with increasing age, (3) over the gestation period and in estrous females; and (4) to vary seasonally. Our results showed uNeo levels varied over a one-year period and increased in individuals showing respiratory symptoms. Contrary to chimpanzees, uNeo levels did not vary with age or female reproductive status, possibly due to our small sample size. Our study provides a baseline for a better understanding of bonobo's immunocompetence in the context of socio-ecological pressures and for monitoring the health of wild populations.


Assuntos
Pan paniscus , Infecções Respiratórias , Animais , Feminino , Pan paniscus/fisiologia , Neopterina/urina , Pan troglodytes , Biomarcadores/urina , Infecções Respiratórias/veterinária , Mamíferos
3.
Proc Biol Sci ; 289(1986): 20221235, 2022 Nov 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36350212

RESUMO

Fluctuations in environmental temperature affect energy metabolism and stimulate the expression of reversible phenotypic plasticity in vertebrate behavioural and physiological traits. Changes in circulating concentrations of glucocorticoid hormones often underpin environmentally induced phenotypic plasticity. Ongoing climate change is predicted to increase fluctuations in environmental temperature globally, making it imperative to determine the standing phenotypic variation in glucocorticoid responses of free-living populations to evaluate their potential for coping via plastic or evolutionary changes. Using a reaction norm approach, we repeatedly sampled wild great tit (Parus major) individuals for circulating glucocorticoid concentrations during reproduction across five years to quantify individual variation in glucocorticoid plasticity along an environmental temperature gradient. As expected, baseline and stress-induced glucocorticoid concentrations increased with lower environmental temperatures at the population and within-individual level. Moreover, we provide unique evidence that individuals differ significantly in their plastic responses to the temperature gradient for both glucocorticoid traits, with some displaying greater plasticity than others. Average concentrations and degree of plasticity covaried for baseline glucocorticoids, indicating that these two reaction norm components are linked. Hence, individual variation in glucocorticoid plasticity in response to a key environmental factor exists in a wild vertebrate population, representing a crucial step to assess their potential to endure temperature fluctuations.


Assuntos
Glucocorticoides , Passeriformes , Humanos , Animais , Temperatura , Passeriformes/fisiologia , Estações do Ano , Reprodução , Vertebrados
4.
Gen Comp Endocrinol ; 312: 113861, 2021 10 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34302846

RESUMO

Experimental manipulation has established testosterone as a potent, pleiotropic regulator coordinating morphology, physiology and behavior. However, the relationship of field-sampled, unmanipulated testosterone concentrations with traits of interest is often equivocal. Circulating testosterone varies over the course of the day, and recent reports indicate that testosterone is higher during the night in diurnal songbirds. Yet, most field studies sample testosterone during the morning. Sampling at times when levels and individual variation are low may be one reason relationships between testosterone and other traits are not always observed. Testosterone is regulated by the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis, with gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) initiating the endocrine cascade. Research has examined GnRH-induced testosterone levels with traits of interest, yet the relevance of these induced levels and their relationship with endogenously produced levels are not fully clear. Using photostimulated male great tits (Parus major) we tested the hypotheses that circulating testosterone levels peak during the night and that GnRH-induced testosterone concentrations are positively related to nightly testosterone peaks. Blood was sampled during first, middle or last third of night. One week later, baseline and GnRH-induced testosterone levels were sampled during mid-morning. Morning baseline testosterone levels were low compared with night-sampled levels that peaked during the first third of the night. Further, GnRH-induced testosterone was strongly positively correlated with levels observed during the first third of the night. These data suggest that morning testosterone samples likely do not reflect an individual's endogenous peak. Instead, GnRH-induced testosterone levels do approximate an individual's nightly peak and may be an alternative for birds that cannot easily be sampled at night in the field. These findings are likely to have implications for research aimed at relating traits of interest with natural variation in sex steroid hormone levels.


Assuntos
Hormônio Liberador de Gonadotropina , Aves Canoras , Animais , Hormônio Liberador de Gonadotropina/farmacologia , Hormônio Luteinizante , Masculino , Testosterona
5.
J Anim Ecol ; 90(9): 2147-2160, 2021 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33205462

RESUMO

The integration and synthesis of the data in different areas of science is drastically slowed and hindered by a lack of standards and networking programmes. Long-term studies of individually marked animals are not an exception. These studies are especially important as instrumental for understanding evolutionary and ecological processes in the wild. Furthermore, their number and global distribution provides a unique opportunity to assess the generality of patterns and to address broad-scale global issues (e.g. climate change). To solve data integration issues and enable a new scale of ecological and evolutionary research based on long-term studies of birds, we have created the SPI-Birds Network and Database (www.spibirds.org)-a large-scale initiative that connects data from, and researchers working on, studies of wild populations of individually recognizable (usually ringed) birds. Within year and a half since the establishment, SPI-Birds has recruited over 120 members, and currently hosts data on almost 1.5 million individual birds collected in 80 populations over 2,000 cumulative years, and counting. SPI-Birds acts as a data hub and a catalogue of studied populations. It prevents data loss, secures easy data finding, use and integration and thus facilitates collaboration and synthesis. We provide community-derived data and meta-data standards and improve data integrity guided by the principles of Findable, Accessible, Interoperable and Reusable (FAIR), and aligned with the existing metadata languages (e.g. ecological meta-data language). The encouraging community involvement stems from SPI-Bird's decentralized approach: research groups retain full control over data use and their way of data management, while SPI-Birds creates tailored pipelines to convert each unique data format into a standard format. We outline the lessons learned, so that other communities (e.g. those working on other taxa) can adapt our successful model. Creating community-specific hubs (such as ours, COMADRE for animal demography, etc.) will aid much-needed large-scale ecological data integration.


Assuntos
Aves , Metadados , Animais , Bases de Dados Factuais
6.
J Med Primatol ; 2018 May 25.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29799118

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: We present 3 likely cases of testicular dysgenesis syndrome (TDS) within a community of chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes schweinfurthii). We tested whether genetic drift may be the culprit, as a genetic cause has been suspected to account for TDS among other wildlife. METHODS: We successfully sequenced a 367-bp segment spanning the first hypervariable region within the D-loop of the mitochondrial genome for 78 DNA samples. RESULTS: We found 24 polymorphic sequence sites consisting of 7 singletons and 17 parsimony informative sites. This sample contained 9 haplotypes with a diversity index of 0.78 (SD = 0.03). All tests against the null hypothesis of neutral polymorphisms were non-significant (P > .10). The mismatch distribution of pairwise differences does not fit a Poisson's curve (raggedness index = 0.166; SSD = 0.12; P = 1). CONCLUSIONS: Thus, we found no significant signs of genetic isolation, population expansion, or genetic bottleneck. Alternative causes of TDS and how they might pertain to this population are discussed.

7.
Sci Rep ; 7: 41417, 2017 02 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28176810

RESUMO

The black rhinoceros is again on the verge of extinction due to unsustainable poaching in its native range. Despite a wide historic distribution, the black rhinoceros was traditionally thought of as depauperate in genetic variation, and with very little known about its evolutionary history. This knowledge gap has hampered conservation efforts because hunting has dramatically reduced the species' once continuous distribution, leaving five surviving gene pools of unknown genetic affinity. Here we examined the range-wide genetic structure of historic and modern populations using the largest and most geographically representative sample of black rhinoceroses ever assembled. Using both mitochondrial and nuclear datasets, we described a staggering loss of 69% of the species' mitochondrial genetic variation, including the most ancestral lineages that are now absent from modern populations. Genetically unique populations in countries such as Nigeria, Cameroon, Chad, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Somalia, Mozambique, Malawi and Angola no longer exist. We found that the historic range of the West African subspecies (D. b. longipes), declared extinct in 2011, extends into southern Kenya, where a handful of individuals survive in the Masai Mara. We also identify conservation units that will help maintain evolutionary potential. Our results suggest a complete re-evaluation of current conservation management paradigms for the black rhinoceros.


Assuntos
Evolução Biológica , Conservação dos Recursos Naturais , Perissodáctilos/genética , África Subsaariana , Animais , Sequência de Bases , Teorema de Bayes , Núcleo Celular/genética , DNA Mitocondrial/genética , Variação Genética , Haplótipos/genética , Repetições de Microssatélites/genética , Mitocôndrias/genética , Filogenia , Especificidade da Espécie
8.
Horm Cancer ; 6(4): 182-8, 2015 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25893396

RESUMO

Some studies have reported that birth size is a risk factor for breast cancer, but the reasons for this observation are unknown. Ovarian hormone concentrations may be a link between birth size and breast cancer, but the few tests of this hypothesis are inconsistent, perhaps because of differences in sample composition, inclusion of anovulatory cycles, or use of one hormonal measurement per woman. We present results from the first study to use daily hormonal measurements throughout a woman's complete ovulatory cycle to test the hypothesized relationship between birth size and adult progesterone concentrations. We used a study sample and accompanying data set previously obtained for another research project in which we had collected daily urine samples from 63 healthy premenopausal women throughout a menstrual cycle. Multivariate regression was used to test for trends of individual progesterone indices (from 55 ovulatory cycles) with birth weight or ponderal index, while controlling for age, adult BMI, and age at menarche. Our main finding was that neither birth weight nor ponderal index was associated with biologically significant variation in luteal progesterone indices; the best-estimated effect sizes of birth size on these progesterone indices were small (3.7-10.2%). BMI was the only significant predictor of mean peak urinary progesterone, but it explained <6% of the variance. Our findings, in light of what is currently known regarding associations of breast cancer risk with birth size and adult size, suggest that environmental factors (particularly those that vary by socioeconomic status and affect growth) may underlie associations between birth size and cancer risks without there being any association of birth size with adult ovarian hormone concentrations.


Assuntos
Peso ao Nascer , Neoplasias da Mama/metabolismo , Pré-Menopausa/metabolismo , Progesterona/urina , Adulto , Neoplasias da Mama/epidemiologia , Corpo Lúteo/metabolismo , Feminino , Humanos , Ciclo Menstrual/metabolismo , Fatores de Risco , Adulto Jovem
9.
Biol Lett ; 8(2): 304-7, 2012 Apr 23.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21920955

RESUMO

Ageing can progress at different rates according to an individual's physiological state. Natural hypothermia, including torpor and hibernation, is a common adaptation of small mammals to survive intermittent or seasonal declines in environmental conditions. In addition to allowing energy savings, hypothermia and torpor have been associated with retarded ageing and increased longevity. We tested the hypothesis that torpor use slows ageing by measuring changes in the relative telomere length (RTL) of Djungarian hamsters, Phodopus sungorus, a highly seasonal rodent using spontaneous daily torpor, over 180 days of exposure to a short-day photoperiod and warm (approx. 20°C) or cold (approx. 9°C) air temperatures. Multi-model inference showed that change in RTL within individuals was best explained by positive effects of frequency of torpor use, particularly at low body temperatures, as well as the change in body mass and initial RTL. Telomere dynamics have been linked to future survival and proposed as an index of rates of biological ageing. Our results therefore support the hypothesis that daily torpor is associated with physiological changes that increase somatic maintenance and slow the processes of ageing.


Assuntos
Regulação da Temperatura Corporal , Phodopus/fisiologia , Homeostase do Telômero , Animais , Temperatura Baixa , Cricetinae , Feminino , Temperatura Alta , Atividade Motora , Fotoperíodo , Reação em Cadeia da Polimerase , Estações do Ano , Telômero/química
10.
Am J Primatol ; 71(2): 171-4, 2009 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19058132

RESUMO

We present evidence for the consumption of a diurnal, arboreal, group living primate by bonobos. The digit of an immature black mangabey (Lophocebus aterrimus) was found in the fresh feces of a bonobo (Pan paniscus) at the Lui Kotale study site, Democratic Republic of Congo. In close proximity to the fecal sample containing the remains of the digit, we also found a large part of the pelt of a black mangabey. Evidence suggests that the Lui Kotale bonobos consume more meat than other bonobo populations and have greater variation in the mammalian species exploited than previously thought [Hohmann & Fruth, Folia primatologica 79:103-110]. The current finding supports Stanford's argument [Current Anthropology 39:399-420] that some differences in the diet and behavior between chimpanzees (P. troglodytes) and bonobos are an artefact of the limited number of bonobo study populations. If bonobos did obtain the monkey by active hunting, this would challenge current evolutionary models relating the intra-specific aggression and violence seen in chimpanzees and humans to hunting and meat consumption [Wrangham, Yearbook of Physical Anthropology 42:1-30].


Assuntos
Dieta , Carne , Pan paniscus/fisiologia , Comportamento Predatório/fisiologia , Animais , Cercocebus , República Democrática do Congo , Fezes
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