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Toll-like receptor variation in the bottlenecked population of the endangered Seychelles warbler

Gilroy, DL; van Oosterhout, C; Komdeur, J; Richardson, DS

Toll-like receptor variation in the bottlenecked population of the endangered Seychelles warbler Thumbnail


Authors

DL Gilroy

C van Oosterhout

J Komdeur

DS Richardson



Abstract

In small populations, drift results in a loss of genetic variation, which reduces adaptive evolutionary potential. Furthermore, the probability of consanguineous mating increases which may result in inbreeding depression. Under certain circumstances, balancing selection can counteract drift and maintain variation at key loci. Identifying such loci is important from a conservation perspective and may provide insight into how different evolutionary forces interact in small populations. Toll-like receptor (TLR) genes play a pivotal role in vertebrate innate immune defence by recognizing invading pathogens. We characterize TLR variation in the Seychelles warbler (SW) Acrocephalus sechellensis, an endangered passerine that recently suffered a population bottleneck. Five of seven TLR loci were polymorphic, with one locus (TLR15) containing four functional variants and showing an excess of heterozygotes. Haplotype-level tests failed to detect selection at these loci, but site-specific tests detected signatures of positive selection within TLR3 and TLR15. After characterizing variation (excluding TLR15) in 5–6 other Acrocephalus species, we found that TLR variation was positively correlated with population size across species and followed the pattern observed at neutral microsatellite loci. The depauperate TLR variation observed suggests that even at important immunity-related loci, balancing selection may only attenuate the overriding effects of drift. However, in the SW, TLR15 appears to be an outlier and warrants further investigation. The low levels of TLR variation may be disadvantageous for the long-term viability of the SW and conservation measures that maximize the retention of the variation should be considered.

Citation

Gilroy, D., van Oosterhout, C., Komdeur, J., & Richardson, D. (2017). Toll-like receptor variation in the bottlenecked population of the endangered Seychelles warbler. Animal Conservation, 20(3), 235-250. https://doi.org/10.1111/acv.12307

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Aug 22, 2016
Online Publication Date Oct 13, 2016
Publication Date May 28, 2017
Deposit Date Sep 29, 2021
Publicly Available Date Sep 29, 2021
Journal Animal Conservation
Print ISSN 1367-9430
Electronic ISSN 1469-1795
Publisher Wiley
Volume 20
Issue 3
Pages 235-250
DOI https://doi.org/10.1111/acv.12307
Publisher URL http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/acv.12307
Related Public URLs http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/(ISSN)1469-1795
Additional Information Funders : Natural Environment Research Council (NERC);University of East Anglia;University of Groningen;Earth and Life Systems Alliance (ELSA);Natural Environment Research Council
Projects : Transgenerational impacts on senescence: quantitative genetics of cellular and organismal ageing in the wild
Grant Number: NER/I/S/2002/00712
Grant Number: NE/K005502/1

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