red colobus monkeys
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2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amber E. Trujillo ◽  
Christina M. Bergey

AbstractMalaria is infamous for the massive toll it exacts on human life and health. In the face of this intense selection, many human populations have evolved mechanisms that confer some resistance to the disease, such as sickle-cell hemoglobin or the Duffy null blood group. Less understood are adaptations in other vertebrate hosts, many of which have a longer history of co-evolution with malaria parasites. By comparing malaria resistance adaptations across host species, we can gain fundamental insight into host-parasite co-evolution. In particular, understanding the mechanisms by which non-human primate immune systems combat malaria may be fruitful in uncovering transferable therapeutic targets for humans. However, most research on primate response to malaria has focused on a single or few loci, typically in experimentally-infected captive primates. Here, we report the first transcriptomic study of a wild primate response to a malaria-like parasite, investigating gene expression response of red colobus monkeys (Piliocolobus tephrosceles) to natural infection with the malaria-like parasite, Hepatocystis. We identified colobus genes with expression strongly correlated with parasitemia, including many implicated in human malaria and suggestive of common genetic architecture of disease response. For instance, the expression of ACKR1 (alias DARC) gene, previously linked to resistance in humans, was found to be positively correlated with parasitemia. Other similarities to human parasite response include induction of changes in immune cell type composition and, potentially, increased extramedullary hematopoiesis and altered biosynthesis of neutral lipids. Our results illustrate the utility of comparative immunogenetic investigation of malaria response in primates. Such inter-specific comparisons of transcriptional response to pathogens afford a unique opportunity to compare and contrast the adaptive genetic architecture of disease resistance, which may lead to the identification of novel intervention targets to improve human health.Author SummaryThe co-evolutionary arms race between humans and malaria parasites has been ongoing for millennia. Fully understanding the evolved human response to malaria is impossible without comparative study of parasites in our non-human primate relatives. Though laboratory primates are fruitful models, the complexity of wild primates infected in a natural transmission system may be a more suitable comparison for contextualizing malaria infections in human patients. Here, we investigate the genetic mechanisms underlying the immune response to Hepatocystis, a close relative of human-infective malaria, in a population of wild Ugandan red colobus monkeys. We find that the genes involved have considerable overlap with those active in human malaria patients. Like Plasmodium, Hepatocystis induces changes in blood cell type and may cause the host to produce blood components outside of the bone marrow or alter metabolism related to the production of lipids. Our work helps to identify the genetic mechanisms underlying the arms race between primates and malaria parasites, providing fundamental evolutionary insight. Such comparative work on the interaction between wild non-human primates and malaria parasites can identify ways in which primates have evolved resistance to malaria parasites, and further investigation of such implicated genes may lead to novel potential therapeutic and vaccine targets.



2020 ◽  
Vol 16 (8) ◽  
pp. e1008717 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eerik Aunin ◽  
Ulrike Böhme ◽  
Theo Sanderson ◽  
Noah D. Simons ◽  
Tony L. Goldberg ◽  
...  


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eerik Aunin ◽  
Ulrike Böhme ◽  
Theo Sanderson ◽  
Noah D Simons ◽  
Tony L Goldberg ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTHepatocystis is a genus of single-celled parasites infecting monkeys, bats and squirrels. Although thought to descend from malaria parasites (Plasmodium spp.), Hepatocystis spp. are thought not to undergo replication in the blood – the part of the Plasmodium life cycle which causes the symptoms of malaria. Furthermore, Hepatocystis is transmitted by midges, not mosquitoes. Comparative genomics of Hepatocystis and Plasmodium species therefore presents an opportunity to better understand some of the most important aspects of malaria parasite biology. We were able to generate a draft genome for Hepatocystis using DNA sequencing reads from the blood of a naturally infected red colobus monkey. We provide robust phylogenetic support for Hepatocystis as a sister group to Plasmodium parasites infecting rodents. We show transcriptomic support for a lack of replication in the blood and genomic support for a complete loss of a family of genes involved in red blood cell invasion. Our analyses highlight the rapid evolution of genes involved in parasite vector stages, revealing genes that may be critical for interactions between malaria parasites and mosquitoes.



2015 ◽  
Vol 370 (1683) ◽  
pp. 20150005 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ian C. Gilby ◽  
Zarin P. Machanda ◽  
Deus C. Mjungu ◽  
Jeremiah Rosen ◽  
Martin N. Muller ◽  
...  

Even when hunting in groups is mutually beneficial, it is unclear how communal hunts are initiated. If it is costly to be the only hunter, individuals should be reluctant to hunt unless others already are. We used 70 years of data from three communities to examine how male chimpanzees ‘solve’ this apparent collective action problem. The ‘impact hunter’ hypothesis proposes that group hunts are sometimes catalysed by certain individuals that hunt more readily than others. In two communities (Kasekela and Kanyawara), we identified a total of five males that exhibited high hunt participation rates for their age, and whose presence at an encounter with red colobus monkeys increased group hunting probability. Critically, these impact hunters were observed to hunt first more often than expected by chance. We argue that by hunting first, these males dilute prey defences and create opportunities for previously reluctant participants. This by-product mutualism can explain variation in group hunting rates within and between social groups. Hunting rates declined after the death of impact hunter FG in Kasekela and after impact hunter MS stopped hunting frequently in Kanyawara. There were no impact hunters in the third, smaller community (Mitumba), where, unlike the others, hunting probability increased with the number of females present at an encounter with prey.



2015 ◽  
Vol 282 (1814) ◽  
pp. 20151436 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ria R. Ghai ◽  
Vincent Fugère ◽  
Colin A. Chapman ◽  
Tony L. Goldberg ◽  
T. Jonathan Davies

Non-lethal parasite infections are common in wildlife, but there is little information on their clinical consequences. Here, we pair infection data from a ubiquitous soil-transmitted helminth, the whipworm (genus Trichuris ), with activity data from a habituated group of wild red colobus monkeys ( Procolobus rufomitratus tephrosceles ) in Kibale National Park, Uganda. We use mixed-effect models to examine the relationship between non-lethal parasitism and red colobus behaviour. Our results indicate that red colobus increased resting and decreased more energetically costly behaviours when shedding whipworm eggs in faeces. Temporal patterns of behaviour also changed, with individuals switching behaviour less frequently when whipworm-positive. Feeding frequency did not differ, but red colobus consumption of bark and two plant species from the genus Albizia , which are used locally in traditional medicines, significantly increased when animals were shedding whipworm eggs. These results suggest self-medicative plant use, although additional work is needed to verify this conclusion. Our results indicate sickness behaviours, which are considered an adaptive response by hosts during infection. Induction of sickness behaviour in turn suggests that these primates are clinically sensitive to non-lethal parasite infections.



2015 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 21-24 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. P. Hillyer ◽  
R. Armstrong ◽  
A. H. Korstjens

Abstract. Like most arboreal primates, red colobus monkeys obtain most water from plants in their diet, licking their body or drinking occasionally from standing water in tree holes. Terrestrial drinking is not normally reported for arboreal primates. Here we report observations of terrestrial drinking from man-made watering holes by Temminck's red colobus (Piliocolobus badius temminckii) in Abuko Nature Reserve and Bijilo Forest Park, The Gambia. Colobus drinking behaviour in Abuko has been reported previously by Starin (1991, 2002), mostly involving juveniles or lactating females; water was most commonly obtained by licking water from the body and leaves or obtained from tree holes. Some juveniles were seen drinking from swampy ground and puddles in the dry season, but otherwise the only terrestrial water body available to colobus during the study by Starin contained crocodiles, a known predator of red colobus at the site. Our observations show that shallow man-made watering holes that have since been created and do not harbour predators were used by different age classes. We discuss some of the implications of this behaviour for this endangered subspecies and report on the trend of increasing temperatures in The Gambia.



2015 ◽  
Vol 370 (1669) ◽  
pp. 20140112 ◽  
Author(s):  
Colin A. Chapman ◽  
Valérie A. M. Schoof ◽  
Tyler R. Bonnell ◽  
Jan F. Gogarten ◽  
Sophie Calmé

Despite strong links between sociality and fitness that ultimately affect the size of animal populations, the particular social and ecological factors that lead to endangerment are not well understood. Here, we synthesize approximately 25 years of data and present new analyses that highlight dynamics in forest composition, food availability, the nutritional quality of food, disease, physiological stress and population size of endangered folivorous red colobus monkeys ( Procolobus rufomitratus ). There is a decline in the quality of leaves 15 and 30 years following two previous studies in an undisturbed area of forest. The consumption of a low-quality diet in one month was associated with higher glucocorticoid levels in the subsequent month and stress levels in groups living in degraded forest fragments where diet was poor was more than twice those in forest groups. In contrast, forest composition has changed and when red colobus food availability was weighted by the protein-to-fibre ratio, which we have shown positively predicts folivore biomass, there was an increase in the availability of high-quality trees. Despite these changing social and ecological factors, the abundance of red colobus has remained stable, possibly through a combination of increasing group size and behavioural flexibility.



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