| Literature DB >> 15913420 |
Scott L Nuismer1, Sarah P Otto.
Abstract
Interactions between hosts and parasites provide an ongoing source of selection that promotes the evolution of a variety of features in the interacting species. Here, we use a genetically explicit mathematical model to explore how patterns of gene expression evolve at genetic loci responsible for host resistance and parasite infection. Our results reveal the striking yet intuitive conclusion that gene expression should evolve along very different trajectories in the two interacting species. Specifically, host resistance loci should frequently evolve to co-express alleles, whereas parasite infection loci should evolve to express only a single allele. This result arises because hosts that co-express resistance alleles are able to recognize and clear a greater diversity of parasite genotypes. By the same token, parasites that co-express antigen or elicitor alleles are more likely to be recognized and cleared by the host, and this favours the expression of only a single allele. Our model provides testable predictions that can help interpret accumulating data on expression levels for genes relevant to host-parasite interactions.Entities:
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Year: 2005 PMID: 15913420 PMCID: PMC1140679 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pbio.0030203
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Biol ISSN: 1544-9173 Impact factor: 8.029
Figure 1Expression Levels Are Allowed to Evolve toward Any Point in the Triangle
For example, the circle corresponds to the additive case, where heterozygotes are equally likely to express either A only or a only and so have fitness halfway between the fitnesses of AA and aa individuals. The evolution of expression levels predicted by the quasi-linkage equilibrium analysis is indicated by the direction of arrows. Double-headed arrows indicate that the quasi-linkage equilibrium analysis predicts an outcome that depends on allele frequencies. Results from numerical simulations are shown as percentages of total parameter combinations that resulted in evolution of expression levels in the direction shown. Entries labelled “neutral” are cases where no change in modifier frequency occured. The range of parameter values used in these simulations is described in the main text. Predicted patterns for the host are shown in (A), and those for the parasite are shown in (B).
An Interaction between a Host and a Parasite Results in Either Infection or Resistance, Depending on the Phenotype of the Interacting Species
Figure 2Co-Evolutionary Dynamics of Parasite Gene Expression
In both panels, the frequency of a modifier allele that increases the expression of the B allele in the parasite population is shown in orange. The frequency of the B allele in the parasite population is shown in blue, and the frequency of the A allele in the host population is shown in maroon. Both panels considered an expression modifier introduced at an initial frequency of 0.5 with the following effects: ρ 1[MM] = 0.75, ρ 1[Mm] = 0.50, ρ 1[mm] = 0.25, ρ 3[MM] = 0.25, ρ 3[Mm] = 0.5, ρ 3[mm] = 0.75, and ρ 2[i] = 1 − ρ 1[i] − ρ 3[i]. Parameters for the IMA model (A) were α = 0.15, α = 0.20, r = 0.25, and r = 0.25. Parameters for the GFG model (B) were γh = 0.15, γp = 0.20, C = 0.075, C = 0.10, c = 0.0075, c = 0.01, r = 0.25, and r = 0.25. In both panels, the initial frequency of the A allele and the B allele was 0.55.