Balenger Susan L, Zuk Marlene
Department of Ecology, Evolution and Behavior, University of Minnesota-Twin Cities, Saint Paul, MN 55108, USA
Department of Ecology, Evolution and Behavior, University of Minnesota-Twin Cities, Saint Paul, MN 55108, USA.
Integr Comp Biol. 2014 Oct;54(4):601-13. doi: 10.1093/icb/icu059. Epub 2014 May 29.
Hamilton and Zuk proposed a good-genes model of sexual selection in which genetic variation can be maintained when females prefer ornaments that indicate resistance to parasites. When trait expression depends on a male's resistance, the co-adaptive cycles between host resistance and parasite virulence provide a mechanism in which genetic variation for fitness is continually renewed. The model made predictions at both the intraspecific and interspecific levels. In the three decades since its publication, these predictions have been theoretically examined in models of varying complexity, and empirically tested across many vertebrate and invertebrate taxa. Despite such prolonged interest, however, it has turned out to be extremely difficult to empirically demonstrate the process described, in part because we have not been able to test the underlying mechanisms that would unequivocally identify how parasites act as mediators of sexual selection. Here, we discuss how the use of high-throughput sequencing datasets available from modern genomic approaches might improve our ability to test this model. We expect that important contributions will come through the ability to identify and quantify the suite of parasites likely to influence the evolution of hosts' resistance, to confidently reconstruct phylogenies of both host and parasite taxa, and, perhaps most exciting, to detect generational cycles of heritable variants in populations of hosts and parasites. Integrative approaches, building on systems undergoing parasite-mediated selection with genomic resources already available, will be particularly useful in moving toward robust tests of this hypothesis. We finish by presenting case studies of well-studied host-parasite relationships that represent promising avenues for future research.
汉密尔顿和祖克提出了一种性选择的优质基因模型,在该模型中,当雌性偏好那些表明对寄生虫具有抵抗力的装饰物时,遗传变异能够得以维持。当性状表达取决于雄性的抵抗力时,宿主抵抗力与寄生虫毒力之间的共同适应循环提供了一种机制,通过该机制,适合度的遗传变异得以不断更新。该模型在种内和种间层面都做出了预测。自其发表后的三十年里,这些预测在不同复杂程度的模型中得到了理论检验,并在许多脊椎动物和无脊椎动物类群中进行了实证检验。然而,尽管有如此长期的关注,但事实证明,要通过实证来证明所描述的过程极其困难,部分原因是我们一直无法测试那些能够明确确定寄生虫如何作为性选择调节因子的潜在机制。在这里,我们讨论利用现代基因组方法可获得的高通量测序数据集如何可能提高我们检验该模型的能力。我们预计,通过识别和量化可能影响宿主抵抗力进化的一系列寄生虫、自信地重建宿主和寄生虫类群的系统发育,以及或许最令人兴奋的是,检测宿主和寄生虫种群中可遗传变异的代际循环,将能做出重要贡献。基于已有的基因组资源,在经历寄生虫介导选择的系统上构建综合方法,对于朝着对这一假设进行有力检验迈进将特别有用。我们最后通过展示一些研究充分的宿主 - 寄生虫关系的案例研究来结束本文,这些案例代表了未来研究的有希望的途径。