Semen adaptation to microbes in an insect

Author:

Otti Oliver123ORCID,Rossel Natacha1,Reinhardt Klaus13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Animal and Plant Sciences, University of Sheffield , Sheffield , United Kingdom

2. Animal Population Ecology, Animal Ecology I, University of Bayreuth , Bayreuth , Germany

3. Applied Zoology, TU Dresden , Dresden , Germany

Abstract

Abstract Sperm function is suggested to evolve by sexual selection but is also reduced by microbial damage. Here, we provide experimental evidence that male fertility can adapt to microbes. We found that in vivo, male fertility was reduced by one-fifth if sperm encountered microbes in the females that they had not previously been exposed to, compared to sperm from males that coevolved with these microbes. The female immune system activation reduced male fertility by an additional 13 percentage points. For noncoevolved males, fertility was larger if microbes were injected into females after they had stored away the sperm, indicating microbial protection as a previously unrecognized benefit of female sperm storage. Both medical and evolutionary research on reproductive health and fertility will benefit from considering our findings that the impact of microbes on sperm depends on their joint evolutionary history. Our results may assist in reconciling contradictory results of sexually transmitted disease effects on sperm and bring empirical realism to a recently proposed role of locally adapted reproductive microbiomes to speciation.

Funder

Swiss National Science Foundation

German Research Foundation DFG

NERC postdoctoral fellowship

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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