Ashby B, King K C
Biosciences, College of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Exeter, Penryn, Cornwall, UK.
J Evol Biol. 2015 Mar;28(3):511-20. doi: 10.1111/jeb.12590. Epub 2015 Feb 12.
The Red Queen hypothesis (RQH) predicts that parasite-mediated selection will maintain sexual individuals in the face of competition from asexual lineages. The prediction is that sexual individuals will be difficult targets for coevolving parasites if they give rise to more genetically diverse offspring than asexual lineages. However, increasing host genetic diversity is known to suppress parasite spread, which could provide a short-term advantage to clonal lineages and lead to the extinction of sex. We test these ideas using a stochastic individual-based model. We find that if parasites are readily transmissible, then sex is most likely to be maintained when host diversity is high, in agreement with the RQH. If transmission rates are lower, however, we find that sexual populations are most likely to persist for intermediate levels of diversity. Our findings thus highlight the importance of genetic diversity and its impact on epidemiological dynamics for the maintenance of sex by parasites.
红皇后假说(RQH)预测,在面对来自无性谱系的竞争时,寄生虫介导的选择将维持有性个体的存在。该预测认为,如果有性个体产生的基因多样化后代比无性谱系更多,那么它们将成为共同进化的寄生虫难以攻击的目标。然而,已知宿主遗传多样性的增加会抑制寄生虫传播,这可能会给克隆谱系带来短期优势并导致有性生殖的灭绝。我们使用基于个体的随机模型来检验这些观点。我们发现,如果寄生虫易于传播,那么与红皇后假说一致,当宿主多样性高时,有性生殖最有可能得以维持。然而,如果传播率较低,我们发现有性种群最有可能在中等多样性水平下持续存在。因此,我们的研究结果突出了遗传多样性及其对寄生虫维持有性生殖的流行病学动态的影响的重要性。