Factors affecting the levels of protection transferred from mother to offspring following immune challenge

Christina Coakley, Vincent Staszewski, Katherine A Herborn, Emma JA Cunningham

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract / Description of output

Introduction
The transfer of antibodies from mother to offspring is key to protecting young animals from disease and can have a major impact on responses to infection and offspring fitness. Such maternal effects also allow young that may be exposed to disease in early life to focus resources on growth and development at this critical period of development. Maternally transferred antibodies are therefore an important source of phenotypic variation in host phenotype as well as influencing host susceptibility and tolerance to infection across generations. It has previously been assumed the transfer of antibodies is passive and invariant and reflects the level of circulating antibody in the mother at the time of transfer. However, whether females may vary in the relative amount of protection transferred to offspring has seldom been explored.

Results
Here we show that females differ widely in the relative amount of specific blood antibodies they transfer to the embryonic environment (range 9.2%-38.4% of their own circulating levels) in Chinese painted quail (Coturnix chinensis). Relative transfer levels were unrelated to the size of a female’s own immune response. Furthermore, individual females were consistent in their transfer level, both across different stages of their immune response and when challenged with different vaccine types. The amount of antibody transferred was related to female condition, but baseline antibody responses of mothers were not. However, we found no evidence for any trade-offs between the relative amount of antibody transferred with other measures of reproductive investment.

Conclusions
These results suggest that the relative amount of antibodies transferred to offspring can vary significantly and consistently between females. Levels of transfer may therefore be a separate trait open to manipulation or selection with potential consequences for offspring health and fitness in both wild and domesticated populations.
Original languageEnglish
Article number46
JournalFrontiers in Zoology
Volume11
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jul 2014

Keywords / Materials (for Non-textual outputs)

  • Maternal antibodies
  • Maternal effect
  • Trade-offs
  • Immunity
  • Differential allocation
  • Ecoimmunology

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