Engelstädter Jan, Bonhoeffer Sebastian
Institute of Integrative Biology, ETH Zurich, Switzerland.
PLoS Comput Biol. 2009 Aug;5(8):e1000469. doi: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1000469. Epub 2009 Aug 14.
Antagonistic coevolution between hosts and parasites can involve rapid fluctuations of genotype frequencies that are known as Red Queen dynamics. Under such dynamics, recombination in the hosts may be advantageous because genetic shuffling can quickly produce disproportionately fit offspring (the Red Queen hypothesis). Previous models investigating these dynamics have assumed rather simple models of genetic interactions between hosts and parasites. Here, we assess the robustness of earlier theoretical predictions about the Red Queen with respect to the underlying host-parasite interactions. To this end, we created large numbers of random interaction matrices, analysed the resulting dynamics through simulation, and ascertained whether recombination was favoured or disfavoured. We observed Red Queen dynamics in many of our simulations provided the interaction matrices exhibited sufficient 'antagonicity'. In agreement with previous studies, strong selection on either hosts or parasites favours selection for increased recombination. However, fast changes in the sign of linkage disequilibrium or epistasis were only infrequently observed and do not appear to be a necessary condition for the Red Queen hypothesis to work. Indeed, recombination was often favoured even though the linkage disequilibrium remained of constant sign throughout the simulations. We conclude that Red Queen-type dynamics involving persistent fluctuations in host and parasite genotype frequencies appear to not be an artefact of specific assumptions about host-parasite fitness interactions, but emerge readily with the general interactions studied here. Our results also indicate that although recombination is often favoured, some of the factors previously thought to be important in this process such as linkage disequilibrium fluctuations need to be reassessed when fitness interactions between hosts and parasites are complex.
宿主与寄生虫之间的拮抗协同进化可能涉及基因型频率的快速波动,即所谓的红皇后动态。在这种动态下,宿主中的重组可能是有利的,因为基因重排可以迅速产生比例失调的适应性后代(红皇后假说)。以往研究这些动态的模型假设宿主与寄生虫之间的基因相互作用相当简单。在此,我们评估了早期关于红皇后的理论预测相对于潜在宿主 - 寄生虫相互作用的稳健性。为此,我们创建了大量随机相互作用矩阵,通过模拟分析由此产生的动态,并确定重组是受到青睐还是不利。我们在许多模拟中观察到了红皇后动态,前提是相互作用矩阵表现出足够的“拮抗性”。与先前的研究一致,对宿主或寄生虫的强烈选择有利于增加重组的选择。然而,连锁不平衡或上位性符号的快速变化很少被观察到,似乎也不是红皇后假说起作用的必要条件。事实上,即使在整个模拟过程中连锁不平衡的符号保持不变,重组也常常受到青睐。我们得出结论,涉及宿主和寄生虫基因型频率持续波动的红皇后型动态似乎不是关于宿主 - 寄生虫适应性相互作用的特定假设的人为产物,而是在这里研究的一般相互作用中很容易出现。我们的结果还表明,尽管重组常常受到青睐,但当宿主与寄生虫之间的适应性相互作用复杂时,一些先前认为在此过程中重要的因素,如连锁不平衡波动,需要重新评估。