PUBLICATION

Behavioural fever is a synergic signal amplifying the innate immune response

Authors
Boltaña, S., Rey, S., Roher, N., Vargas, R., Huerta, M., Huntingford, F.A., Goetzm, F.W., Moore, J., Garcia-Valtanen, P., Estepa, A., and Mackenzie, S.
ID
ZDB-PUB-130712-25
Date
2013
Source
Proceedings. Biological sciences   280(1766): 20131381 (Journal)
Registered Authors
Keywords
behavioural fever, anti-viral response, gene-environment interaction
Datasets
GEO:GSE32636
MeSH Terms
  • Animals
  • Behavior, Animal*
  • Brain/immunology
  • Brain/physiology
  • Brain/virology
  • Immunity, Innate*
  • RNA, Messenger/metabolism
  • Signal Transduction
  • Temperature*
  • Transcriptome
  • Up-Regulation
  • Zebrafish/immunology
  • Zebrafish/physiology*
  • Zebrafish/virology
  • Zebrafish Proteins/genetics
  • Zebrafish Proteins/metabolism
PubMed
23843398 Full text @ Proc. Biol. Sci.
Abstract

Behavioural fever, defined as an acute change in thermal preference driven by pathogen recognition, has been reported in a variety of invertebrates and ectothermic vertebrates. It has been suggested, but so far not confirmed, that such changes in thermal regime favour the immune response and thus promote survival. Here, we show that zebrafish display behavioural fever that acts to promote extensive and highly specific temperature-dependent changes in the brain transcriptome. The observed coupling of the immune response to fever acts at the gene–environment level to promote a robust, highly specific time-dependent anti-viral response that, under viral infection, increases survival. Fish that are not offered a choice of temperatures and that therefore cannot express behavioural fever show decreased survival under viral challenge. This phenomenon provides an underlying explanation for the varied functional responses observed during systemic fever. Given the effects of behavioural fever on survival and the fact that it exists across considerable phylogenetic space, such immunity–environment interactions are likely to be under strong positive selection.

Genes / Markers
Figures
Expression
Phenotype
Mutations / Transgenics
Human Disease / Model
Sequence Targeting Reagents
Fish
Antibodies
Orthology
Engineered Foreign Genes
Mapping