寄生虫选择与有性生殖的适宜性

Samantha A. Klosak
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引用次数: 1

摘要

有性生殖是一个非常昂贵的过程:无性谱系的生长速度超过有性谱系的生长速度。尽管如此,性在自然界是普遍存在的。红皇后假说认为,由于性和重组会产生遗传变异的后代,这些后代可能会逃脱共同进化的寄生虫的感染,因此寄生虫会在宿主中选择性别(Lively & Dybdahl, 2000)。我们的研究直接测试了红桃皇后是否可以解释自然种群中性别的维持。这项实验的重点是新西兰原生蜗牛Potamopyrgus antipodarum的自然种群。该物种的个体要么是二倍体和有性繁殖,要么是三倍体和无性繁殖(Lively & Osnas, 2006)。这只蜗牛自然感染了吸虫寄生虫,小阴茎,它是绝育的,因此对它的宿主有很强的选择。红皇后假说预测,寄生虫应该周期性地提高有性个体相对于无性个体的适应性。因此,我们建立了包含来自同一自然种群的有性和无性蜗牛的中胚层。这些中子代动物中有一半暴露于寄生虫,另一半则没有。然后让这些蜗牛在一年的时间里繁殖。我们用流式细胞术测定了双亲和后代二倍体的频率,从而确定了有性个体在存在和不存在寄生虫的情况下的适合度。有趣的是,我们发现有性繁殖的个体目前比无性繁殖的个体更容易感染寄生虫。在有性亲本感染程度相对较高的水箱中,有性个体在后代一代中的频率明显下降,这表明寄生对有性生殖的适应性结果。我们的研究结果表明,寄生虫选择确实可以对生殖模式起作用。此外,我们的结果与理论(King, Delph, Jokela, & Lively, 2009)和我们系统中先前的一项实地研究一致,该研究表明,寄生虫选择的方向是可变的,因此寄生虫会周期性地选择反对有性繁殖(Vergara, Lively, King, & Jokela, 2013)。目前的实验将持续数年,以追踪寄生虫在性别选择上的变化。
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Parasite Selection and the Fitness of Sexual Reproduction
Sexual reproduction is a very costly process: the growth rate of asexual lineages exceeds that of sexual lineages. Nonetheless, sex is prevalent in nature. The Red Queen Hypothesis argues that, because sex and recombination generate genetically variable offspring that may escape infection by coevolving parasites, parasites select for sex in hosts (Lively & Dybdahl, 2000). Our research directly tests if the Red Queen can explain the maintenance of sex in a natural population. This experiment focuses on a natural population of the snail Potamopyrgus antipodarum , which is native to New Zealand. Individuals of this species are either diploid and sexually reproducing or triploid and asexually reproducing (Lively & Osnas, 2006). This snail is naturally infected by the trematode parasite, Microphallus , which is sterilizing and thus exerts strong selection on its host. The Red Queen Hypothesis predicts that parasites should periodically increase the fitness of sexual relative to asexual individuals. We accordingly established mesocosms containing both sexual and asexual snails from the same natural population. Half of these mesocosms were exposed to parasites and the other half were not. These snails were then allowed to reproduce over the course of a year. We used flow cytometry to determine the frequency of diploids in the parents and the offspring, and thereby the fitness of sexual individuals in the presence and absence of parasites. Interestingly, we find that sexual individuals are currently more susceptible to parasites than are asexual individuals. In tanks in which sexual parents are relatively more infected, the frequency of sexual individuals declined significantly more in the offspring generation, indicating a fitness consequence of parasitism for sexual reproduction. Our findings suggest that parasite selection can indeed operate on reproductive mode. Moreover, our results are consistent with theory (King, Delph, Jokela, & Lively, 2009) and a prior field study in our system indicating that the direction of parasite selection is variable, such that parasites periodically select against sexual reproduction (Vergara, Lively, King, & Jokela, 2013). This current experiment will continue for multiple years in order to track the variation in parasite selection on sex through time.
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