Křemenová Jana, Bartonička Tomáš, Balvín Ondřej, Massino Christian, Reinhardt Klaus, Sasínková Markéta, Weig Alfons R, Otti Oliver
Department of Botany and Zoology, Faculty of Science, Masaryk University, Kotlářská 2, 611 37, Brno, Czech Republic.
Department of Ecology, Faculty of Environmental Sciences, Czech University of Life Sciences Prague, Kamýcká 129, 165 21, Prague 6, Czech Republic.
Sci Rep. 2021 Jul 30;11(1):15538. doi: 10.1038/s41598-021-94622-6.
Sperm performance can vary in ecologically divergent populations, but it is often not clear whether the environment per se or genomic differences arising from divergent selection cause the difference. One powerful and easily manipulated environmental effect is diet. Populations of bedbugs (Cimex lectularius) naturally feed either on bat or human blood. These are diverging genetically into a bat-associated and a human-associated lineage. To measure how male diet affects sperm performance, we kept males of two HL and BL populations each on either their own or the foreign diet. Then we investigated male reproductive success in a single mating and sperm competition context. We found that male diet affected female fecundity and changed the outcome of sperm competition, at least in the human lineage. However, this influence of diet on sperm performance was moulded by an interaction. Bat blood generally had a beneficial effect on sperm competitiveness and seemed to be a better food source in both lineages. Few studies have examined the effects of male diet on sperm performance generally, and sperm competition specifically. Our results reinforce the importance to consider the environment in which sperm are produced. In the absence of gene flow, such differences may increase reproductive isolation. In the presence of gene flow, however, the generally better sperm performance after consuming bat blood suggests that the diet is likely to homogenise rather than isolate populations.
在生态环境不同的种群中,精子性能可能会有所不同,但往往不清楚是环境本身还是分歧选择产生的基因组差异导致了这种差异。一种强大且易于操控的环境影响因素是饮食。臭虫(温带臭虫)种群自然地以蝙蝠血或人血为食。它们在基因上正分化为与蝙蝠相关和与人类相关的两个谱系。为了衡量雄性饮食如何影响精子性能,我们将两个HL和BL种群的雄性分别置于其自身的饮食或外来饮食环境中。然后我们在单次交配和精子竞争的背景下研究了雄性的繁殖成功率。我们发现,雄性饮食会影响雌性的繁殖力,并改变精子竞争的结果,至少在人类谱系中是这样。然而,饮食对精子性能的这种影响是由一种相互作用塑造的。蝙蝠血通常对精子竞争力有有益影响,而且在两个谱系中似乎都是更好的食物来源。总体而言,很少有研究考察雄性饮食对精子性能的影响,特别是对精子竞争的影响。我们的研究结果强化了考虑精子产生环境的重要性。在没有基因流动的情况下,这种差异可能会增加生殖隔离。然而,在有基因流动的情况下,食用蝙蝠血后精子性能通常更好,这表明饮食可能会使种群同质化,而不是使种群隔离。