| Literature DB >> 28890581 |
Agata Plesnar-Bielak1, Marta K Labocha1, Paulina Kosztyła1, Katarzyna R Woch1, Weronika M Banot1, Karolina Sychta1, Magdalena Skarboń1, Monika A Prus1, Zofia M Prokop1.
Abstract
The maintenance of males and outcrossing is widespread, despite considerable costs of males. By enabling recombination between distinct genotypes, outcrossing may be advantageous during adaptation to novel environments and if so, it should be selected for under environmental challenge. However, a given environmental change may influence fitness of male, female, and hermaphrodite or asexual individuals differently, and hence the relationship between reproductive system and dynamics of adaptation to novel conditions may not be driven solely by the level of outcrossing and recombination. This has important implications for studies investigating the evolution of reproductive modes in the context of environmental changes, and for the extent to which their findings can be generalized. Here, we use Caenorhabditis elegans-a free-living nematode species in which hermaphrodites (capable of selfing but not cross-fertilizing each other) coexist with males (capable of fertilizing hermaphrodites)-to investigate the response of wild type as well as obligatorily outcrossing and obligatorily selfing lines to stressfully increased ambient temperature. We found that thermal stress affects fitness of outcrossers much more drastically than that of selfers. This shows that apart from the potential for recombination, the selective pressures imposed by the same environmental change can differ between populations expressing different reproductive systems and affect their adaptive potential.Entities:
Keywords: Adaptation; Fitness; Mating systems; Outcrossing; Stress; Temperature
Year: 2017 PMID: 28890581 PMCID: PMC5569660 DOI: 10.1007/s11692-017-9413-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evol Biol ISSN: 0071-3260 Impact factor: 3.119
Fig. 1Schematic representation of our experimental design
Effects of temperature, breeding and source line together with and all the interactions on lifetime reproductive success (number of offspring produced) of C. elegans hermaphrodites (xol-mutated and wild type lines) and pairs of males and females (fog-mutated lines) analyzed using linear model with differences in variances among breeding systems, temperatures and source lines
| Effect | df. | F | p |
|---|---|---|---|
| Temperature | 1;167 | 1392.749 | <0.001 |
| Breeding system | 2;167 | 160.915 | <0.001 |
| Source line | 1;167 | 14.151 | <0.001 |
| Temperature x breeding system | 2;167 | 16.352 | <0.001 |
| Temperature x source line | 1;167 | 8.634 | 0.004 |
| Breeding system x source line | 2;167 | 1.119 | 0.329 |
| Temperature x breeding system x source line | 2;167 | 0.394 | 0.675 |
| Error | 167 | – | – |
Fig. 2Least square means and confidence intervals for the number of offspring produced by the obligatorily selfing (fog-mutated—‘fog’), facultatively outcrossing (wild type—‘wt’) and obligatorily outcrossing (xol-mutated—‘xol’) lines for each of the source lines and thermal treatments. The estimates were calculated from the linear model allowing for different variances among breeding systems, temperatures and source lines