Department of Biology, Ashoka University, Sonipat, India.
Department of Ecology and Genetics, Program of Animal Ecology, Evolutionary Biology Centre, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden.
BMC Biol. 2021 Jun 2;19(1):114. doi: 10.1186/s12915-021-01049-6.
Sexual dimorphism in immunity is believed to reflect sex differences in reproductive strategies and trade-offs between competing life history demands. Sexual selection can have major effects on mating rates and sex-specific costs of mating and may thereby influence sex differences in immunity as well as associated host-pathogen dynamics. Yet, experimental evidence linking the mating system to evolved sexual dimorphism in immunity are scarce and the direct effects of mating rate on immunity are not well established. Here, we use transcriptomic analyses, experimental evolution and phylogenetic comparative methods to study the association between the mating system and sexual dimorphism in immunity in seed beetles, where mating causes internal injuries in females.
We demonstrate that female phenoloxidase (PO) activity, involved in wound healing and defence against parasitic infections, is elevated relative to males. This difference is accompanied by concomitant sex differences in the expression of genes in the prophenoloxidase activating cascade. We document substantial phenotypic plasticity in female PO activity in response to mating and show that experimental evolution under enforced monogamy (resulting in low remating rates and reduced sexual conflict relative to natural polygamy) rapidly decreases female (but not male) PO activity. Moreover, monogamous females had evolved increased tolerance to bacterial infection unrelated to mating, implying that female responses to costly mating may trade off with other aspects of immune defence, an hypothesis which broadly accords with the documented sex differences in gene expression. Finally, female (but not male) PO activity shows correlated evolution with the perceived harmfulness of male genitalia across 12 species of seed beetles, suggesting that sexual conflict has a significant influence on sexual dimorphisms in immunity in this group of insects.
Our study provides insights into the links between sexual conflict and sexual dimorphism in immunity and suggests that selection pressures moulded by mating interactions can lead to a sex-specific mosaic of immune responses with important implications for host-pathogen dynamics in sexually reproducing organisms.
免疫中的性别二态性被认为反映了生殖策略上的性别差异,以及竞争生活史需求之间的权衡。性选择可以对交配率和交配的性别特异性成本产生重大影响,从而可能影响免疫方面的性别差异以及相关的宿主-病原体动态。然而,将交配系统与免疫方面的进化性别二态性联系起来的实验证据很少,交配率对免疫的直接影响也尚未得到很好的证实。在这里,我们使用转录组分析、实验进化和系统发育比较方法来研究交配系统与种子象鼻虫免疫中的性别二态性之间的关联,在这些象鼻虫中,交配会导致雌性内部受伤。
我们证明,雌性酚氧化酶(PO)活性(参与伤口愈合和抵御寄生虫感染)相对于雄性升高。这种差异伴随着与前酚氧化酶激活级联相关的基因表达的同时性别差异。我们记录了雌性 PO 活性对交配的显著表型可塑性,并表明在强制一夫一妻制下进行的实验进化(导致低再交配率和相对于自然多配偶制减少的性冲突)迅速降低了雌性(但不是雄性)PO 活性。此外,一夫一妻制的雌性已经进化出对细菌感染的更高耐受性,与交配无关,这意味着雌性对昂贵交配的反应可能与免疫防御的其他方面权衡,这一假设与记录的基因表达方面的性别差异广泛一致。最后,雌性(但不是雄性)PO 活性与 12 种种子象鼻虫的雄性生殖器危害性之间表现出相关进化,这表明性冲突对该组昆虫的免疫性别二态性有重大影响。
我们的研究提供了关于性冲突和免疫性别二态性之间联系的见解,并表明由交配相互作用塑造的选择压力可以导致免疫反应的性别特异性镶嵌体,这对有性繁殖生物中的宿主-病原体动态具有重要意义。