Immune response of hibernating European bats to a fungal challenge

Immunological responses of hibernating mammals are suppressed at low body temperatures, a possible explanation for the devastating effect of the white-nose syndrome on hibernating North American bats. However, European bats seem to cope well with the fungal causative agent of the disease. To better...

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Main Authors: Marcus Fritze, David Costantini, Jörns Fickel, Dana Wehner, Gábor Á. Czirják, Christian C. Voigt
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Company of Biologists 2019-10-01
Series:Biology Open
Subjects:
Online Access:http://bio.biologists.org/content/8/10/bio046078
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spelling doaj-f72c493401dd468e906c5bd9e1160ab52021-06-02T14:30:03ZengThe Company of BiologistsBiology Open2046-63902019-10-0181010.1242/bio.046078046078Immune response of hibernating European bats to a fungal challengeMarcus Fritze0David Costantini1Jörns Fickel2Dana Wehner3Gábor Á. Czirják4Christian C. Voigt5 Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research, Alfred-Kowalke-Str. 17, 10315 Berlin, Germany Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research, Alfred-Kowalke-Str. 17, 10315 Berlin, Germany Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research, Alfred-Kowalke-Str. 17, 10315 Berlin, Germany Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research, Alfred-Kowalke-Str. 17, 10315 Berlin, Germany Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research, Alfred-Kowalke-Str. 17, 10315 Berlin, Germany Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research, Alfred-Kowalke-Str. 17, 10315 Berlin, Germany Immunological responses of hibernating mammals are suppressed at low body temperatures, a possible explanation for the devastating effect of the white-nose syndrome on hibernating North American bats. However, European bats seem to cope well with the fungal causative agent of the disease. To better understand the immune response of hibernating bats, especially against fungal pathogens, we challenged European greater mouse-eared bats (Myotis myotis) by inoculating the fungal antigen zymosan. We monitored torpor patterns, immune gene expressions, different aspects of the acute phase response and plasma oxidative status markers, and compared them with sham-injected control animals at 30 min, 48 h and 96 h after inoculation. Torpor patterns, body temperatures, body masses, white blood cell counts, expression of immune genes, reactive oxygen metabolites and non-enzymatic antioxidant capacity did not differ between groups during the experiment. However, zymosan injected bats had significantly higher levels of haptoglobin than the control animals. Our results indicate that hibernating greater mouse-eared bats mount an inflammatory response to a fungal challenge, with only mild to negligible consequences for the energy budget of hibernation. Our study gives a first hint that hibernating European bats may have evolved a hibernation-adjusted immune response in order to balance the trade-off between competent pathogen elimination and a prudent energy-saving regime.http://bio.biologists.org/content/8/10/bio046078fungal challengetorporbody temperaturezymosanacute phase responseoxidative stressmyotis myotis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Marcus Fritze
David Costantini
Jörns Fickel
Dana Wehner
Gábor Á. Czirják
Christian C. Voigt
spellingShingle Marcus Fritze
David Costantini
Jörns Fickel
Dana Wehner
Gábor Á. Czirják
Christian C. Voigt
Immune response of hibernating European bats to a fungal challenge
Biology Open
fungal challenge
torpor
body temperature
zymosan
acute phase response
oxidative stress
myotis myotis
author_facet Marcus Fritze
David Costantini
Jörns Fickel
Dana Wehner
Gábor Á. Czirják
Christian C. Voigt
author_sort Marcus Fritze
title Immune response of hibernating European bats to a fungal challenge
title_short Immune response of hibernating European bats to a fungal challenge
title_full Immune response of hibernating European bats to a fungal challenge
title_fullStr Immune response of hibernating European bats to a fungal challenge
title_full_unstemmed Immune response of hibernating European bats to a fungal challenge
title_sort immune response of hibernating european bats to a fungal challenge
publisher The Company of Biologists
series Biology Open
issn 2046-6390
publishDate 2019-10-01
description Immunological responses of hibernating mammals are suppressed at low body temperatures, a possible explanation for the devastating effect of the white-nose syndrome on hibernating North American bats. However, European bats seem to cope well with the fungal causative agent of the disease. To better understand the immune response of hibernating bats, especially against fungal pathogens, we challenged European greater mouse-eared bats (Myotis myotis) by inoculating the fungal antigen zymosan. We monitored torpor patterns, immune gene expressions, different aspects of the acute phase response and plasma oxidative status markers, and compared them with sham-injected control animals at 30 min, 48 h and 96 h after inoculation. Torpor patterns, body temperatures, body masses, white blood cell counts, expression of immune genes, reactive oxygen metabolites and non-enzymatic antioxidant capacity did not differ between groups during the experiment. However, zymosan injected bats had significantly higher levels of haptoglobin than the control animals. Our results indicate that hibernating greater mouse-eared bats mount an inflammatory response to a fungal challenge, with only mild to negligible consequences for the energy budget of hibernation. Our study gives a first hint that hibernating European bats may have evolved a hibernation-adjusted immune response in order to balance the trade-off between competent pathogen elimination and a prudent energy-saving regime.
topic fungal challenge
torpor
body temperature
zymosan
acute phase response
oxidative stress
myotis myotis
url http://bio.biologists.org/content/8/10/bio046078
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