High parasite virulence necessary for the maintenance of host outcrossing via parasite-mediated selection

Author:

Slowinski Samuel P1,Cho JaeHoon2,Penley McKenna J2,Alexander Laura W3,Greenberg Arielle B2,Namburar Sathvik R2,Morran Levi T2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology, University of Maryland , College Park, MD , United States

2. Department of Biology, Emory University , Atlanta GA , United States

3. Department of Integrative Biology, University of California , Berkeley, CA , United States

Abstract

Abstract Biparental sex is widespread in nature, yet costly relative to uniparental reproduction. It is generally unclear why self-fertilizing or asexual lineages do not readily invade outcrossing populations. The Red Queen hypothesis predicts that coevolving parasites can prevent self-fertilizing or asexual lineages from invading outcrossing host populations. However, only highly virulent parasites are predicted to maintain outcrossing, which may limit the general applicability of the Red Queen hypothesis. Here, we tested whether the ability of coevolving parasites to prevent invasion of self-fertilization within outcrossing host populations was dependent on parasite virulence. We introduced wild-type Caenorhabditis elegans hermaphrodites, capable of both self-fertilization and outcrossing, into C. elegans populations fixed for a mutant allele conferring obligate outcrossing. Replicate C. elegans populations were exposed for 24 host generations to one of four strains of Serratia marcescens parasites that varied in virulence, under three treatments: a heat-killed (control, noninfectious) parasite treatment, a fixed-genotype (nonevolving) parasite treatment, and a copassaged (potentially coevolving) parasite treatment. As predicted, self-fertilization invaded C. elegans host populations in the control and fixed-parasite treatments, regardless of parasite virulence. In the copassaged treatment, selfing invaded host populations coevolving with low- to mid-virulence strains, but remained rare in hosts coevolving with highly virulent bacterial strains. Therefore, we found that only highly virulent coevolving parasites can impede the invasion of selfing.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference49 articles.

1. Parasites and the evolution of self-fertilization;Agrawal,2001

2. The curse of the pharaoh: The evolution of virulence in pathogens with long living propagules;Bonhoeffer,1996

3. Genetics of Caenorhabditis elegans;Brenner,1974

4. Polymicrobial diseases of animals and humans;Brogden,2002

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