| Literature DB >> 25567945 |
Pedro E Gundel1, Marina Omacini1, Victor O Sadras2, Claudio M Ghersa1.
Abstract
Neotyphodium endophytic fungi, the asexual state of Epichloë species, protect cool-season grasses against stresses. The outcomes of Neotyphodium-grass symbioses are agronomically relevant as they may affect the productivity of pastures. It has been suggested that the mutualism is characteristic of agronomic grasses and that differential rates of gene flow between both partners' populations are expected to disrupt the specificity of the association and, thus, the mutualism in wild grasses. We propose that compatibility is necessary but not sufficient to explain the outcomes of Neotyphodium-grass symbiosis, and advance a model that links genetic compatibility, mutualism effectiveness, and endophyte transmission efficiency. For endophytes that reproduce clonally and depend on allogamous hosts for reproduction and dissemination, we propose that this symbiosis works as an integrated entity where gene flow promotes its fitness and evolution. Compatibility between the host plant and the fungal endophyte would be high in genetically close parents; however, mutualism effectiveness and transmission efficiency would be low in fitness depressed host plants. Increasing the genetic distance of mating parents would increase mutualism effectiveness and transmission efficiency. This tendency would be broken when the genetic distance between parents is high (out-breeding depression). Our model allows for testable hypotheses that would contribute to understand the coevolutionary origin and future of the endophyte-grass mutualism.Entities:
Keywords: Epichloë; Neotyphodium endophyte; genetic specificity; mutualism effectiveness; species interactions; symbiosis; transmission efficiency
Year: 2010 PMID: 25567945 PMCID: PMC3352510 DOI: 10.1111/j.1752-4571.2010.00152.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evol Appl ISSN: 1752-4571 Impact factor: 5.183
Figure 1Annual life cycle in a grass population symbiotic with Neotyphodium endophyte with four life stages (Seed, Seedling, Vegetative and Reproductive tiller) and vital rates between two consecutive stages (Germination, Tillering, Flowering and Fecundity). Endophyte-infected and noninfected plants are represented in grey and white respectively. Control flow keys () indicate points in the host life cycle in which population can be sieved by the biotic and abiotic environment selecting for genotypes of one of the partners or both, the host plant and the endophyte. In particular for the fungus, those transitions are known as partial transmission efficiencies of endophyte between two consecutive stages. Consequently, these transmissions control the proportion of endophyte-infected individuals in the populations. Indicated with dashed circles are those points in which gene flow can be mediated by pollen (only for host local population) and by seed (for both endophyte and host local population). The figure was built with information taken from different sources (e.g. Ravel et al. 1997; Clay and Schardl 2002; Schardl et al. 2004; Gundel et al. 2008; Rodriguez et al. 2009).
Figure 2Predicted progeny fitness, compatibility, mutualism effectiveness and transmission efficiency as a function of genetic diversity in allogamous species. Upper panel: progeny fitness (continuous lines, left axis) and expected level of compatibility between Neotyphodium endophytes and host plants (dashed lines, right axis) in relation to genetic distance between mating parents. Lower panel: effectiveness of the mutualistic interaction between endophytes and host plants (continuous lines, left axis) and endophyte transmission efficiency (dashed lines, right axis) in relation to the genetic distance between mating parents. White, grey and dark-grey zones represent a progressive increment in the genetic distance between mating parents (x-axis) with the corresponding intra-population, inter-population and inter-species crossings.