在电离辐射下进化后的秀丽隐杆线虫的宿主防御改变

IF 2.3 Q2 ECOLOGY BMC ecology and evolution Pub Date : 2024-07-09 DOI:10.1186/s12862-024-02282-7
Loïc Quevarec, Levi T Morran, Elizabeth Dufourcq-Sekatcheff, Olivier Armant, Christelle Adam-Guillermin, Jean-Marc Bonzom, Denis Réale
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摘要

背景:对压力源的适应会导致其他性状付出代价。这些代价对适应性起着不可避免的作用,并影响种群的进化轨迹。宿主防御似乎极易受到这些成本的影响,这可能是因为宿主防御的维持需要付出高能量成本,但却是生存所必需的。因此,在评估与污染有关的生态风险时,应考虑这些成本,以评估压力因素对种群的进化后果。然而,据我们所知,辐照环境中的进化对宿主防御的影响还从未被研究过。利用实验进化方法,我们分析了暴露于 0、1.4 和 50.0 mGy.h- 1 的 137Cs 伽马辐射的草履虫种群在 20 次转移(约 20 代)中的适应性。然后,将转移 17 中的种群放置在没有辐照的相同环境条件下(即普通花园)约 10 代,然后将其暴露于细菌寄生虫 Serratia marcescens,并估算其存活率,以研究宿主防御。最后,我们研究了辐照种群的适应性与宿主防御之间是否存在进化权衡:结果:我们发现,与对照组相比,两种辐照处理的适存度都较低,但在 50.0 mGy.h- 1 的处理中,适存度随着时间的推移而增加,这表明种群具有局部适应性。然后,在两种辐照处理下进化过的普通花园种群对S. marcescens的存活率较低,表明伽马辐照环境下的进化对草履虫的宿主防御产生了代价。此外,我们还发现,在对照处理中,多代实验结束时的标准化适存度与秀丽隐杆线虫对 S. marcescens 的存活率之间存在权衡,但在两种辐照处理中,这两种性状之间存在正相关。这些结果表明,在辐照种群中,对电离辐射最敏感的种群也最容易感染病原体。另一方面,其他经过辐照的种群似乎对这两种胁迫因子产生了交叉抗性:我们的研究表明,当新的应激因素出现时,即使在第一种应激因素结束后的几代人中,对环境应激因素的适应也可能与进化代价相关。在受辐照的种群中,我们观察到了对电离辐射的抗性进化,这似乎也提供了对抗病原体的优势。另一方面,一些受辐照的种群似乎积累了对应激源的敏感性。这项工作提供了一个新的论据,说明在生态毒理学和生态风险评估中考虑进化变化的重要性。
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Host defense alteration in Caenorhabditis elegans after evolution under ionizing radiation.

Background: Adaptation to a stressor can lead to costs on other traits. These costs play an unavoidable role on fitness and influence the evolutionary trajectory of a population. Host defense seems highly subject to these costs, possibly because its maintenance is energetically costly but essential to the survival. When assessing the ecological risk related to pollution, it is therefore relevant to consider these costs to evaluate the evolutionary consequences of stressors on populations. However, to the best of our knowledge, the effects of evolution in irradiate environment on host defense have never been studied. Using an experimental evolution approach, we analyzed fitness across 20 transfers (about 20 generations) in Caenorhabditis elegans populations exposed to 0, 1.4, and 50.0 mGy.h- 1 of 137Cs gamma radiation. Then, populations from transfer 17 were placed in the same environmental conditions without irradiation (i.e., common garden) for about 10 generations before being exposed to the bacterial parasite Serratia marcescens and their survival was estimated to study host defense. Finally, we studied the presence of an evolutionary trade-off between fitness of irradiated populations and host defense.

Results: We found a lower fitness in both irradiated treatments compared to the control ones, but fitness increased over time in the 50.0 mGy.h- 1, suggesting a local adaptation of the populations. Then, the survival rate of C. elegans to S. marcescens was lower for common garden populations that had previously evolved under both irradiation treatments, indicating that evolution in gamma-irradiated environment had a cost on host defense of C. elegans. Furthermore, we showed a trade-off between standardized fitness at the end of the multigenerational experiment and survival of C. elegans to S. marcescens in the control treatment, but a positive correlation between the two traits for the two irradiated treatments. These results indicate that among irradiated populations, those most sensitive to ionizing radiation are also the most susceptible to the pathogen. On the other hand, other irradiated populations appear to have evolved cross-resistance to both stress factors.

Conclusions: Our study shows that adaptation to an environmental stressor can be associated with an evolutionary cost when a new stressor appears, even several generations after the end of the first stressor. Among irradiated populations, we observed an evolution of resistance to ionizing radiation, which also appeared to provide an advantage against the pathogen. On the other hand, some of the irradiated populations seemed to accumulate sensitivities to stressors. This work provides a new argument to show the importance of considering evolutionary changes in ecotoxicology and for ecological risk assessment.

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