Published December 14, 2022 | Version v1
Dataset Open

Data for: Genomic heterozygosity is associated with parasite abundance, but the effects are not mediated by host condition

  • 1. Claremont McKenna, Pitzer and Scripps Colleges*
  • 2. Harvey Mudd College

Description

Whether, when, and how genetic diversity buffers individuals and populations against infectious disease risk is a critical and open question for understanding wildlife disease and zoonotic disease risk. Several, but not all, studies have found negative relationships between infection and heterozygosity in wildlife. Since they can host multiple zoonotic infections, we sampled a population of wild deer mice (Peromyscus maniculatus), sequenced their genomes, and examined their fecal samples for coccidia and nematode eggs. We analyzed coccidia infection status, abundance, and coinfection status in relation to per-locus and per-individual measures of heterozygosity, as well as identified SNPs associated with infection status. Since heterozygosity might affect host condition, and condition is known to affect immunity, it was included as a co-variate in the per-individual analyses and as response variable in relation to heterozygosity. Not only did coccidia-infected individuals have lower levels of genome-wide per-locus diversity across all metrics, but we found an inverse relationship between genomic diversity and severity of coccidia infection. We also found weaker evidence that coinfected individuals had lower levels of private allelic variation than all other groups. In the per-individual analyses, relationships between heterozygosity and infection were marginal but followed the same negative trends. Condition was negatively correlated with infection, but was not associated with heterozygosity, suggesting that effects of heterozygosity on infection were not mediated by host condition in this system. Association tests identified multiple loci involved in the inflammatory response, with a particular role for NF-κB signaling, supporting previous work on the genetic basis of coccidia resistance. Taken together, we find that increased genome-wide neutral diversity, the presence of specific genetic variants, and improved condition positively impact infection status. Our results underscore the importance of considering host genomic variation as a buffer against infection, especially in systems that can harbor zoonotic diseases.

Notes

BFS 2019 - rodent infection heterozygosity data.csv contains capture data, infection data and heterozygosity data.

Capture data: Trapping grid (GRID), grid site (Grid2), trap number (Trap), Species (PM = Peromyscus maniculatus), Sex (F = female, M = male),  Age (A = adult, SA = subadult), reproductive characteristics (VAG = perforate vagina, NIP = enlarged nipples indicative of lactation, PREG = pregnant, TES = enlarged testes, Repro = reproductive status, total length in mm, body length in mm, and weight in g. 

Infection data: Coccidia oocysts per gram of feces at initial capture (Init.Coccidia.EPG, and log transformed in logCoccidiaEPG), nematode eggs per gram of feces at initial capture (Init.Nem.EPG and log transformed in logNemEPG), binary infected with coccidia or not (Infection.Status), coinfection status (Coinf.status), Coccidia severity (Coccidia.group), and length-weight residual condition (condition)

Individual-level heterozygosity data: Number of sites analyzed (N_SITES), expected heterozygosity (He), standardized observed heterozygosity (Ho_standard), and standardized inbreeding coefficient (Fis_standard)

Pman_13Jul21.vcf.gz

This file contains SNP data. 

Funding provided by: W.M. Keck Science Department, Claremont McKenna, Pitzer, and Scripps Colleges

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BFS_2019_-_rodent_infection_heterozygosity_data.csv

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