Abstract

Dietary carotenoids have been proposed to boost immune system and antioxidant functions in vertebrate animals, but studies aimed at testing these physiological functions of carotenoids have often failed to find support. Here we subject yellow canaries (Serinus canaria), which possess high levels of carotenoids in their tissue, and white recessive canaries, which possess a knockdown mutation that results in very low levels of tissue carotenoids, to oxidative and pathogen challenges. Across diverse measures of physiological performance, we detect no differences between carotenoid-rich yellow and carotenoid-deficient white canaries. These results add further challenge to the assumption that carotenoids are directly involved in supporting physiological function in vertebrate animals. While some dietary carotenoids provide indirect benefits as retinoid precursors, our observations suggest that carotenoids themselves may play little to no direct role in key physiological processes in birds. Dietary carotenoids have been proposed to have physiological benefits in addition to contributing to coloration. Here, Koch et al. compare immune and antioxidant functions in yellow, carotenoid-rich vs. white, carotenoid-deficient canaries and find no difference, suggesting a limited physiological role of carotenoids.

Keywords

CarotenoidSongbirdBiologyImmune systemAntioxidantFunction (biology)Gene knockdownZoologyBiochemistryCell biologyGeneticsEcologyGene

MeSH Terms

AnimalsAntioxidantsCanariesCarotenoidsGene Expression RegulationImmunityInnateLipopolysaccharidesMutationPigmentationPigmentsBiologicalScavenger ReceptorsClass BTetanus Toxoid

Affiliated Institutions

Related Publications

Publication Info

Year
2018
Type
article
Volume
9
Issue
1
Pages
491-491
Citations
1894
Access
Closed

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1894
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Cite This

Rebecca E. Koch, Andreas N. Kavazis, Dennis Hasselquist et al. (2018). No evidence that carotenoid pigments boost either immune or antioxidant defenses in a songbird. Nature Communications , 9 (1) , 491-491. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-018-02974-x

Identifiers

DOI
10.1038/s41467-018-02974-x
PMID
29403051
PMCID
PMC5799171

Data Quality

Data completeness: 86%