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Journal Article

Citation

Pursall ER, Rolff J. PLoS One 2011; 6(5): e19972.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2011, Public Library of Science)

DOI

10.1371/journal.pone.0019972

PMID

21625631

PMCID

PMC3097213

Abstract

The pathology of many of the world's most important infectious diseases is caused by the immune response. Additionally age-related disease is often attributed to inflammatory responses. Consequently a reduction in infections and hence inflammation early in life has been hypothesized to explain the rise in lifespan in industrialized societies. Here we demonstrate experimentally for the first time that eliciting an immune response early in life accelerates ageing. We use the beetle Tenebrio molitor as an inflammation model. We provide a proof of principle for the effects of early infection on morbidity late in life and demonstrate a long-lasting cost of immunopathology. Along with presenting a proof-of-principle study, we discuss a mechanism for the apparently counter-adaptive persistence of immunopathology in natural populations. If immunopathology from early immune response only becomes costly later in life, natural selection on reducing self-harm would be relaxed, which could explain the presence of immune self-harm in nature.


Language: en

Keywords

Animals; Aging; Models, Animal; Adaptation, Physiological; Coleoptera

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