Data from: Larval UV exposure impairs adult immune function through a trade-off with larval investment in cuticular melanin
Despite the strong impact of ultraviolet (UV) radiation on invertebrates, it is unknown whether it affects immune function across metamorphosis. More generally, the mechanisms on how larval stressors bridge metamorphosis and shape adult fitness in animals with a complex life cycle remain poorly unde...
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Zusammenfassung: | Despite the strong impact of ultraviolet (UV) radiation on invertebrates,
it is unknown whether it affects immune function across metamorphosis.
More generally, the mechanisms on how larval stressors bridge
metamorphosis and shape adult fitness in animals with a complex life cycle
remain poorly understood. We studied whether cuticular melanin content is
upregulated under UV exposure in the larval stage of the damselfly
Coenagrion puella and whether this is traded off across metamorphosis
against a key component of the invertebrate immune response, the melanotic
encapsulation response, in the adult stage. Larvae exposed to UV increased
the melanin content in their exoskeleton and metamorphosed later and at a
smaller mass than animals reared without UV. Across metamorphosis, this
was associated with a reduced melanotic encapsulation response, thereby
constituting the first proof for a UV driven impaired immune response in
an invertebrate. The demonstrated costs of UV exposure in terms of age and
mass at metamorphosis and reduced adult immune response likely translate
into reduced adult fitness. Path analysis indicated that the
immunosuppressive property of larval UV exposure was not mediated by age
and mass at metamorphosis, but instead that the adult immune response was
traded off against larval cuticular melanin investment. Melanin-based
trade-off across metamorphosis provide a new pathway by which effects of
larval stressors are carried over to the adult stage and thereby advances
our understanding of the still largely enigmatic mechanisms of carryover
effects of larval stressors across metamorphosis. Given the mechanistic
base, this carryover effect of larval UV exposure on adult immune function
is expected to be general and may constitute a widespread and important
cost of UV exposure in invertebrates. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.48077 |