Departamento de Genética, Evolução e Bioagentes, Instituto de Biologia, Universidade Estadual de Campinas, CEP 13083-970 Campinas, Cx. Postal 6109 SP, Brazil.
J Invertebr Pathol. 2010 Oct;105(2):145-50. doi: 10.1016/j.jip.2010.06.002. Epub 2010 Jun 8.
Male-killing bacteria are maternally inherited agents that cause death of sons of infected females. Their transmission rate is commonly high but imperfect and also sensitive to different environmental factors. Therefore, the proportion of infected females should be reduced in each generation. In order to explain male-killers spread and persistence in host population, a mechanism resulting in the relative increase of infected females must outweigh the losses caused by the imperfect transmission. The resource release hypothesis states that the males' death results in increased resources available to sibling females which would otherwise be used by their male siblings. Infected females are then expected: to be larger than uninfected females in natural populations; or to have higher viability; or to have shorter development times; or any combination of these outcomes. Here, we tested the resource release hypothesis by measuring body size of infected and uninfected wild-caught Drosophila melanogaster females and carried out other fitness related measures in the laboratory. Wild-caught infected females produced more daughters than uninfected females in their first days in the laboratory. However, although no significant difference in viability was found in a controlled experiment with infected and uninfected flies from a standard laboratory strain, there was a decrease in development time probably mediated by reduced competition. Fitness effects conditioned by the host genetic background are pointed out as a possible explanation for this difference between wild and laboratory flies. Our findings are discussed in the context of the resource advantage hypothesis.
杀雄菌是一种母系遗传的病原体,可导致感染雌性的雄性后代死亡。其传播率通常较高,但并不完美,并且对不同的环境因素也很敏感。因此,每一代感染雌性的比例都应降低。为了解释杀雄菌在宿主群体中的传播和持续存在,一种导致感染雌性相对增加的机制必须超过不完善传播所造成的损失。资源释放假说指出,雄性的死亡导致可用于姐妹雌性的资源增加,否则这些资源将被雄性兄弟消耗。感染雌性随后预期会表现出以下特征:在自然种群中比未感染的雌性更大;或具有更高的存活率;或具有更短的发育时间;或具有这些结果的任何组合。在这里,我们通过测量野生捕获的黑腹果蝇感染和未感染的雌性个体的体型,以及在实验室中进行其他与适应性相关的测量,来检验资源释放假说。在实验室中,野生捕获的感染雌性在最初几天内比未感染的雌性产生更多的后代。然而,尽管在一项针对来自标准实验室品系的感染和未感染果蝇的受控实验中没有发现存活率存在显著差异,但发育时间的缩短可能是由于竞争减少所致。宿主遗传背景所决定的适应性效应被指出是野生和实验室果蝇之间存在这种差异的可能解释。我们的研究结果在资源优势假说的背景下进行了讨论。