| Literature DB >> 21083915 |
Pierrick Labbé1, Pedro F Vale, Tom J Little.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A central hypothesis in the evolutionary ecology of parasitism is that trade-offs exist between resistance to parasites and other fitness components such as fecundity, growth, survival, and predator avoidance, or resistance to other parasites. These trade-offs are called costs of resistance. These costs fall into two broad categories: constitutive costs of resistance, which arise from a negative genetic covariance between immunity and other fitness-related traits, and inducible costs of resistance, which are the physiological costs incurred by hosts when mounting an immune response. We sought to study inducible costs in depth using the crustacean Daphnia magna and its bacterial parasite Pasteuria ramosa.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 21083915 PMCID: PMC2998533 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2148-10-355
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Evol Biol ISSN: 1471-2148 Impact factor: 3.260
Literature survey of studies testing for constitutive (a) and inducible (b) costs of immunity in arthropods.
| Ref | Species | Cost ? | Selection | Challenge | Environment | Observations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| a Constitutive cost | ||||||
| [ | resistance virus | - | Standard lab conditions | adevelopment time difference tend to decrease after two more generations | ||
| [ | growth rateb, survivalb | resistance | - | Poor quality food | bcost of resistance for one population, advantage for the other | |
| [ | survivalc | resistance | - | larval competition | ccost of resistance for one population on two tested | |
| [ | resistance | - | Standard lab conditions | includes a susceptiblity-selected control (different effect) | ||
| [ | early pupation = low melanization | early/late pupation | beads to test melanization | Standard lab conditions | no control for wounding | |
| [ | cuticular colord | - | - | Standard lab conditions | dcuticular color is correlated with investment in immunity; positively correlated with longevity, no effect on fecundity | |
| [ | longevity, fecundity, mating success | resistance | - | Standard lab conditions | includes a susceptiblity-selected control (same effect) | |
| [ | resistance | - | Various food levels and competition | ecost found only for lowest food levels | ||
| [ | fecundity, egg viability, starvation tolerance | resistance | - | Standard lab conditions | ||
| [ | competitive abilityf | resistance | - | Various food levels and competition | fcost found only for lowest food levels | |
| [ | resistance, survival, competition abilityg | high/low densities | - | Standard lab conditions | gindividuals selected at high densities fare actually better | |
| [ | resistance | - | High/Low temperatures | hcost found only for high temperature | ||
| [ | fecundity | - | - | Standard lab conditions | ||
| [ | fecundityi | - | - | High/Low food levels | icost found only for low food | |
| [ | fecundityj, competitivityj | resistance | - | High/Low larval competition | jcost found only for high competition level | |
| [ | resistance | - | Standard lab conditions | kcost found only for females; lreduced development time for selected lines | ||
| [ | fecundity, resistance to different parasites | - | - | High/low food quality | ||
| [ | - | - | Standard lab conditions | mresistance is actually positively correlated with this trait; nunpublished data cited | ||
| [ | mortality, age of 1st reproduction, fecundity | - | - | Standard lab conditions | ||
| [ | competitive ability | - | - | High densities, very low food | ||
| [ | fitness | - | - | Low quality natural environment | ||
| [ | survival, fitness | +/- | - | low density, high food | ||
| [ | - | generalist fungus | solitary/gregarious | oassume plasticity = cost | ||
| [ | - | Nylon inserted | Standard lab conditions | |||
| [ | fecundity; | - | heat killed bact injected | Standard lab conditions | pcosts shown in 1 line only | |
| [ | - | LPS injected, beads inserted | High/zero food levels | qsterile workers; rcost found only when starved | ||
| [ | - | beads inserted | Standard lab conditions | sdepend on the charge of the bead | ||
| [ | - | High/low food levels | tcosts result from wounding only, just after injection (not lasting) | |||
| [ | resistance | exposure | Standard lab conditions | |||
| [ | - | exposure | low food and high densityu | uhigh density for first experiment only | ||
| [ | fitness | - | exposure | Low quality natural environment | ||
Details given for each study are: the species studied (Species), whether a cost was found or not (Costs?: traits for which a cost was detected are bolded), whether the lines used in the experiment where selected before, and if so the object of the selection (Selection), how the animal's immunity was challenged (Challenge) and finally what were the environmental conditions tested (Environment).
Details of experimental designs presented in the current study.
| Exposure | Food | |||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| # | Host clones | Parasite strains | spore nb | nb | time (days) | age (days) | Jar size (mL) | qty (×106) | T°(°C) | rep | ind/jar | Expe time (Days) | ||
| 1 | GG3,GG4, GG7,GG13 | Sp1,Sp8 | 50000 | 1 | 2 | 5 | 60 | 3.5 | 20 | 35 | 1 | c. | last death | |
| Sp1 | 200000 | |||||||||||||
| 2 | GG4,GG7 | Sp1 | 20000 | 1, 2, 4 | 2 | 5, 11, 19, 27 | 60 | 3.5 | 20 | 40 | 1 | c. | last death | |
| 3 | GG4 | Sp1 | 2500 | 1, 2 | 10a | 1, 5a | 60 | 2.1 | 15, 20,25 | 30 | 1 | c. | 60 daysa | |
| 4 | GG3 | Sp1 | 5000 | 1 | 5 | 1 | 60 | 5 | 20 | 24/72 | 1 | c. | 38 days | |
| 50000 | ||||||||||||||
| 5 | <20 clones, recently wild-caughtb | Mix wild spores | 50000 | 1 | 5 | 1 | 200 | 5 | 20 | 70 | 5 | - | 35 | |
| 100000 | ||||||||||||||
aat 20°C, degree-day equivalent for other T°
b Hosts were collected from a Scottish population in Summer 2003, see Duncan and Little Evolution 2007, 61(4):796-803
For each experiment (referred to by their number: #), the D. magna clones (Host clones) and the P. ramosa strains (Parasite strains) used are indicated. The protocol used for the exposure(s) is given, described by the number of spores per Daphnia added (spore nb), the number (nb), the length (time) and the age (age) of the individuals when each exposure was performed. The environmental conditions of the experiment are detailed. For food, the algae species (Sp.: C for Chlorella, S for Scenedesmus) and the quantity (qty, in millions of cells) are indicated. The temperature(s) at which the experiment was performed (T°), the number of replicates per treatment (rep), the number of individuals per jar (ind/jar), the jar size, the controls used [Cont.: crushed unexposed Daphnia (c. D.) or sterile water (H2O)] and the total length of the experiment (Expe time) are also given.
Costs in Daphnia magna.
| # | Inducible Cost? | Challenge | Environment | Observations |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | age first reproduction, size, | various strains and doses | low food | a only for one |
| 2 | age first reproduction, survival, fecundity | multiple exposures | low food | |
| 3 | fecundity, survival | single or double dose | various T°, low food | |
| 4 | fecundity, | single or double dose | normal | one |
| 5 | single or double dose (no control) | normal | many genotypes (wild-caught | |
For each experiment (referred to by their number: #), the finding (bolded) or absence (normal) of inducible costs of immunity in response to exposure is indicated for the traits tested. Details of the type of challenge and experimental environment for each experiment are also given.
Figure 1Experiment 1 results (four . In all panels, the black bar represents means for unexposed controls. For the exposed individuals, light grey bars are means for uninfected hosts and dark grey bars are means for the infected. For each genotype, the exposure order is always: controls, parasite spore 8 (Sp8) low dose (uninfected/infected), parasite spore 1 (Sp1) low dose (uninfected/infected) and Sp1 high dose (uninfected/infected). Panel A presents for each category the average age at which females released their first clutch (for GG3, a and b represent two statistically different groups, see text). Panel B presents for each category the average body size of host at day 12. Panel C presents for each category the average age on the day of death (for GG3, a and b represent two statistically different groups, see text). Panel D presents for each category the mean reproductive success, i.e. the number of offspring produced during the entire life (for GG3, a and b represent two statistically different groups, see text). Bars are standard errors.
Figure 2Experiment 2 results (two host genotypes and multiple parasite exposures, see text). The black bar represents means for unexposed controls. For the exposed individuals, light grey bars are means for uninfected and dark grey bars are means for infected. For each genotype, the exposure order is always controls, single exposure (uninfected/infected), double exposure (uninfected/infected) and quadruple exposure (uninfected/infected). Panel A presents for each category the average age at which females released their first clutch. Panel B presents for each category the average age on the day of death. Panel C presents for each category the mean reproductive success i.e. the number of offspring produced during the entire lifetime. Bars are standard errors.
Figure 3Experiment 3 results (one or two exposures, three temperatures, but only one host genotype, see text). Panel A presents the average number of offspring produced per Daphnia until degree-day 700 at 15°C, 20°C, and 25°C. Panel B presents the proportion of hosts alive until degree-day1200 at 15°C, 20°C, and 25°. For panels A and B, full black lines represent hosts that were not exposed to parasites, dashed lines and dotted lines those that were exposed to a single or a double dose (respectively) but did not develop infection. Bars are standard errors.
Figure 4Experiments 4 and 5 results. Panel A presents the results of experiment 4: survival curves of uninfected individuals are presented for different exposure doses. Panel B presents the results of experiment 5: the distributions of the proportion of live uninfected individuals per jar after 35 days are presented for two doses of parasites (50, 000 spores, grey bars; 100, 000 spores, dark bars).