Authors
Barbara Tschirren, Martin Andersson, Kristin Scherman, Helena Westerdahl, Peer RE Mittl, Lars Råberg
Publication date
2013/5/22
Journal
Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
Volume
280
Issue
1759
Pages
20130364
Publisher
The Royal Society
Description
The discovery of the key role of Toll-like receptors (TLRs) in initiating innate immune responses and modulating adaptive immunity has revolutionized our understanding of vertebrate defence against pathogens. Yet, despite their central role in pathogen recognition and defence initiation, there is little information on how variation in TLRs influences disease susceptibility in natural populations. Here, we assessed the extent of naturally occurring polymorphisms at TLR2 in wild bank voles (Myodes glareolus) and tested for associations between TLR2 variants and infection with Borrelia afzelii, a common tick-transmitted pathogen in rodents and one of the causative agents of human Lyme disease. Bank voles in our population had 15 different TLR2 haplotypes (10 different haplotypes at the amino acid level), which grouped in three well-separated clusters. In a large-scale capture–mark–recapture study, we show that …
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Scholar articles
B Tschirren, M Andersson, K Scherman, H Westerdahl… - Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological …, 2013