McKean Kurt A, Nunney Leonard
Department of Molecular Biology and Genetics, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York 14853, USA.
Evolution. 2005 Jul;59(7):1510-7.
The sexes often differ in the reproductive trait limiting their fitness, an observation known as Bateman's principle. In many species, females are limited by their ability to produce eggs while males are limited by their ability to compete for and successfully fertilize those eggs. As well as promoting the evolution of sex-specific reproductive strategies, this difference may promote sex differences in other life-history traits due to their correlated effects. Sex differences in disease susceptibility and immune function are common. Two hypotheses based on Bateman's principle have been proposed to explain this pattern: that selection to prolong the period of egg production favors improved immune function in females, or that the expression of secondary sexual characteristics reduces immune function in males. Both hypotheses predict a relatively fixed pattern of reduced male immune function, at least in sexually mature individuals. An alternative hypothesis is that Bateman's principle does not dictate fixed patterns of reproductive investment, but favors phenotypically plastic reproductive strategies with males and females adaptively responding to variation in fitness-limiting resource availability. Under this hypothesis, neither sex is expected to possess intrinsically superior immune function, and immunological sex differences may vary in different environments. We demonstrate that sex-specific responses to experimental manipulation of fitness-limiting resources affects both the magnitude and direction of sex differences in immune function in Drosophila melanogaster. In the absence of sexual interactions and given abundant food, the immune function of adults was maximized in both sexes and there was no sex difference. Manipulation of food availability and sexual activity resulted in female-biased immune suppression when food was limited, and male-biased immune suppression when sexual activity was high and food was abundant. The immunological cost to males of increased sexual activity was found to be due in part to reduced time spent feeding. We suggest that for species similarly limited in their reproduction, phenotypic plasticity will be an important determinant of sex differences in immune function and other life-history traits.
两性在限制其适合度的生殖性状上往往存在差异,这一观察结果被称为贝特曼原理。在许多物种中,雌性受限于其产卵能力,而雄性则受限于其竞争并成功使这些卵受精的能力。除了促进特定性别的生殖策略的进化外,这种差异还可能由于其相关效应而促进其他生活史性状的性别差异。疾病易感性和免疫功能的性别差异很常见。基于贝特曼原理提出了两种假说来解释这种模式:延长产卵期的选择有利于提高雌性的免疫功能,或者第二性征的表达会降低雄性的免疫功能。这两种假说都预测雄性免疫功能降低的模式相对固定,至少在性成熟个体中是这样。另一种假说是,贝特曼原理并不决定生殖投资的固定模式,而是有利于具有表型可塑性的生殖策略,雄性和雌性会适应性地应对限制适合度的资源可用性的变化。在这一假说下,预计两性都不具有内在优越的免疫功能,并且免疫性别差异在不同环境中可能会有所不同。我们证明,对限制适合度的资源进行实验性操纵的性别特异性反应会影响黑腹果蝇免疫功能性别差异的大小和方向。在没有性互动且食物充足的情况下,两性成虫的免疫功能都达到了最大化,并且没有性别差异。操纵食物可用性和性活动会导致在食物有限时出现雌性偏向的免疫抑制,而在性活动频繁且食物充足时出现雄性偏向的免疫抑制。发现雄性性活动增加的免疫成本部分是由于进食时间减少。我们认为,对于繁殖同样受限的物种,表型可塑性将是免疫功能和其他生活史性状性别差异的重要决定因素。