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Addicted? Reduced host resistance in populations with defensive symbiontsuse asterix (*) to get italics
Martinez J, Cogni R, Cao C, Smith S, Illingworth CJR & Jiggins FMPlease use the format "First name initials family name" as in "Marie S. Curie, Niels H. D. Bohr, Albert Einstein, John R. R. Tolkien, Donna T. Strickland"
2016
Heritable symbionts that protect their hosts from pathogens have been described in a wide range of insect species. By reducing the incidence or severity of infection, these symbionts have the potential to reduce the strength of selection on genes in the insect genome that increase resistance. Therefore, the presence of such symbionts may slow down the evolution of resistance. Here we investigated this idea by exposing *Drosophila melanogaster* populations to infection with the pathogenic *Drosophila* C virus (DCV) in the presence or absence of *Wolbachia*, a heritable symbiont of arthropods that confers protection against viruses. After nine generations of selection, we found that resistance to DCV had increased in all populations. However, in the presence of Wolbachia the resistant allele of pastrel—a gene that has a major effect on resistance to DCV—was at a lower frequency than in the symbiont-free populations. This finding suggests that defensive symbionts have the potential to hamper the evolution of insect resistance genes, potentially leading to a state of evolutionary addiction where the genetically susceptible insect host mostly relies on its symbiont to fight pathogens.
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Wolbachia, Drosophila melanogaster, antiviral resistance
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Adaptation, Evolutionary Applications, Evolutionary Ecology, Experimental Evolution, Life History
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2016-12-13 20:08:37
Ana Rivero