Heath Sarah E, Knox Kirsten, Vale Pedro F, Collins Sinead
Institute of Evolutionary Biology, School of Biological Sciences, University of Edinburgh, Ashworth Laboratories, The King's Buildings, Charlotte Auerbach Road, Edinburgh EH9 3FL, UK.
Institute of Molecular Plant Sciences, School of Biological Sciences, University of Edinburgh, Rutherford Building, Max Born Crescent, Edinburgh EH9 3BF, UK.
Viruses. 2017 Mar 8;9(3):39. doi: 10.3390/v9030039.
Viruses are important evolutionary drivers of host ecology and evolution. The marine picoplankton has three known resistance types that arise in response to infection with the Phycodnavirus OtV5: susceptible cells (S) that lyse following viral entry and replication; resistant cells (R) that are refractory to viral entry; and resistant producers (RP) that do not all lyse but maintain some viruses within the population. To test for evolutionary costs of maintaining antiviral resistance, we examined whether populations composed of each resistance type differed in their evolutionary responses to several environmental drivers (lower light, lower salt, lower phosphate and a changing environment) in the absence of viruses for approximately 200 generations. We did not detect a cost of resistance as measured by life-history traits (population growth rate, cell size and cell chlorophyll content) and competitive ability. Specifically, all R and RP populations remained resistant to OtV5 lysis for the entire 200-generation experiment, whereas lysis occurred in all S populations, suggesting that resistance is not costly to maintain even when direct selection for resistance was removed, or that there could be a genetic constraint preventing return to a susceptible resistance type. Following evolution, all S population densities dropped when inoculated with OtV5, but not to zero, indicating that lysis was incomplete, and that some cells may have gained a resistance mutation over the evolution experiment. These findings suggest that maintaining resistance in the absence of viruses was not costly.
病毒是宿主生态和进化的重要进化驱动力。海洋微微型浮游生物有三种已知的抗性类型,它们是对藻DNA病毒OtV5感染的反应:易感染细胞(S),在病毒进入和复制后裂解;抗性细胞(R),对病毒进入具有抗性;抗性生产者(RP),并非全部裂解,但在种群中维持一些病毒。为了测试维持抗病毒抗性的进化成本,我们研究了在没有病毒的情况下,由每种抗性类型组成的种群在对几种环境驱动因素(低光照、低盐、低磷酸盐和变化的环境)的进化反应上是否存在差异,持续约200代。我们没有检测到以生活史特征(种群增长率、细胞大小和细胞叶绿素含量)和竞争能力衡量的抗性成本。具体而言,在整个200代实验中,所有R和RP种群对OtV5裂解仍具有抗性,而所有S种群均发生裂解,这表明即使去除了对抗性的直接选择,维持抗性的成本也不高,或者可能存在遗传限制阻止恢复到易感抗性类型。进化后,所有S种群接种OtV5后密度下降,但未降至零,这表明裂解不完全,并且在进化实验过程中一些细胞可能获得了抗性突变。这些发现表明,在没有病毒的情况下维持抗性成本不高。