| Literature DB >> 20509886 |
Mathieu Legros1, Jacob C Koella.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Evolutionary theory predicts that the pressure for parasites to specialize on one host or to become generalists on a wide range of hosts is driven by the diversity or temporal variability of the host's population and by genetic trade-offs in the adaptation to different hosts. We give experimental evidence for this idea by letting the parasite Brachiola algerae evolve on one of four genetically homogeneous lines of the mosquito Aedes aegypti, on a mixture of the four lines or on an alternating sequence of the four lines. The first regime was expected to lead to specialists, the other two to generalists. After 13 generations, we tested the evolved parasites on each of the four lines of the mosquito.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20509886 PMCID: PMC2891725 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2148-10-159
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Evol Biol ISSN: 1471-2148 Impact factor: 3.260
Figure 1Test of evolved parasites. (A) Infectiousness of the evolved parasites and (B) number of spores found in infected mosquitoes when the parasites were tested on the four isofemale lines of the mosquito host. 'Specialized' refers to parasites that had evolved on one isofemale line; 'adapted' refers to parasites that were tested on the same line while 'mismatched' refers to parasites that were tested on a different line. 'Mixture' refers to parasites that had evolved on a mixture of the 4 isofemale lines. 'Alternated' refers to parasites that had evolved on an alternating sequence of the 4 isofemale lines. Each point gives the parasites' infectivity (A) or the mean log-transformed number of spores in infected mosquitoes (B), and the horizontal line gives the means of the pooled replicates. In (A) the vertical lines give the 95% confidence interval of the proportion, and in (B) they give the standard error of the mean.
Analysis of (A) infectivity and (B) (log-transformed) number of spores in infected individuals for the different test combinations.
| (A) Infectivity | (B) Number of spores in infected individuals | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Test combination | 3 | 28.60 | < 0.001 | 194 | 1.26 | 0.288 |
| Evolution regime [Test combination] | 6 | 11.90 | 0.064 | 326 | 1.05 | 0.390 |
| Replicate [Test, Evolution regime] | 25 | 22.35 | 0.615 | 1262 | 0.98 | 0.497 |
| Error | 531 | 57438 | ||||
The analysis compares the four types of tests: specialized parasites on their own host, specialized parasites on mismatched hosts, parasites evolved on mixtures of hosts and parasites evolved on alternating hosts. 'Evolution regime' refers to the isofemale line (or combination of lines) the parasites evolved on.
Type-1 statistical analysis of (A) infectivity and (B) (log-transformed) number of spores in infected individuals.
| (A) Infectivity | (B) Number of spores in infected individuals | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Test line | 3 | 11.22 | 0.01 | 1.148 | 1.39 | 0.246 |
| Isofemale line | 3 | 4.53 | 0.209 | 0.244 | 0.30 | 0.828 |
| Replicate [Isofemale line] | 10 | 5.62 | 0.846 | 3.172 | 1.15 | 0.323 |
| Test line* Isofemale line | 9 | 24.33 | 0.004 | 1.994 | 0.80 | 0.612 |
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| Testline * Replicate [Isofemale line] | 30 | 29.00 | 0.517 | 5.521 | 0.67 | 0.909 |
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| Error | 311 | 85.632 | ||||
The analysis compares only specialized parasites tested on their own host and specialized parasites tested on mismatched hosts. 'Isofemale line' refers the isofemale line the parasites evolved on; 'Test line' is the isofemale line the evolved parasites were tested on. In (A), the factors written in italics are the components of the previous interaction (see Methods.) Note that the second component of the interaction Testline * Replicate is pooled into the error term. The component 'Adapted' (in bold) gives the importance of specialization onto a given host line. In (B) we did not decompose the interaction terms, as they were far from statistically significant.
Figure 2Visualization of the cost of specialization. Each point represents the value of the response index of an evolved parasite on its matched host (i.e. on the isofemale line it had evolved on) against the mean value on its three mismatched hosts. The response index is given as the relative difference between the infectivity of specialized parasites and the infectivity of generalist parasites tested on the same isofemale line. Specialization is costly if the parasites performing best on matched hosts perform worst on mismatched hosts.