Relationships between immune gene expression and circulating cytokine
levels in wild house mice
Abstract
1. Quantitative PCR (qPCR) has been commonly used to measure gene
expression in a number of research contexts, but the measured RNA
concentrations do not always represent the concentrations of active
proteins which they encode. This can be due to transcriptional
regulation or post-translational modifications, or localisation of
immune environments, as can occur during infection. However, in studies
using free-living non-model species, such as in ecoimmunological
research, qPCR may be the only available option to measure a parameter
of interest, and so understanding the quantitative link between gene
expression and associated effector protein levels is vital. 2. Here we
use qPCR to measure concentrations of RNA from mesenteric lymph node
(MLN) and spleen tissue, and multiplex ELISA of blood serum to measure
circulating cytokine concentrations in a wild population of a model
species, Mus musculus domesticus. 3. Few significant correlations were
found between gene expression levels and circulating cytokines of the
same immune genes or proteins, or related functional groups. Where
significant correlations were observed, these were most frequently
within the measured tissue (i.e. the expression levels of genes measured
from spleen tissue were more likely to correlate with each other rather
than with genes measured from MLN tissue, or with cytokine
concentrations measured from blood). 4. Potential reasons for
discrepancies between measures, including differences in decay rates and
transcriptional regulation networks are discussed. We highlight the
relative usefulness of different measures under different research
questions, and consider what might be inferred from immune assays.