Today.Az » Weird / Interesting » Sex - as we know it - works, thanks to ever-evolving host-parasite relationships, biologists find
11 July 2011 [11:00] - Today.Az
It seems we may have parasites to thank for the existence of sex as we know it. Indiana University biologists have found that, although sexual reproduction between two individuals is costly from an evolutionary perspective, it is favored over self-fertilization in the presence of coevolving parasites. Sex allows parents to produce offspring that are more resistant to the parasites, while self-fertilization dooms populations to extinction at the hands of their biological enemies.
The July 8 report in Science, "Running with the Red Queen:
Host-Parasite Coevolution Selects for Biparental Sex," affirms the Red
Queen hypothesis, an evolutionary theory who's name comes from Lewis
Carroll's Alice in Wonderland text: "It takes all the running you can
do, to keep in the same place." The idea is that sexual reproduction via
cross-fertilization keeps host populations one evolutionary step ahead
of the parasites, which are coevolving to infect them. It is within this
coevolutionary context that both hosts and parasites are running
(evolving) as fast as they can just to stay in the same place.
"The widespread existence of sex has been a major problem for
evolutionary biology since the time of Charles Darwin," said lead author
Levi T. Morran. Sex does not make evolutionary sense, because it often
involves the production of males. This is very inefficient, because
males don't directly produce any offspring. Self-fertilization is a far
more efficient means of reproduction, and as such, evolutionary theory
predicts that self-fertilization should be widespread in nature and sex
should be rare. However, as we all know, this is not the case.
The Red Queen Hypothesis provides one possible explanation for the existence of sex.
"The Red Queen Hypothesis predicts that sex should allow hosts to
evade infection from their parasites, whereas self-fertilization may
increase the risk of infection," said co-author Curtis M. Lively.
By combining the DNA of two parents, sex allows parents to produce
offspring that are genetically diverse and different from their parents.
Parasites that have adapted to infect one generation may have
difficulty infecting the next generation. However, offspring produced
through self-fertilization inherit the DNA of their single parent, thus
any parasites adapted to infect the parent should also be capable of
infecting the offspring.
Morran, a post-doctoral researcher, and Lively, a distinguished
professor of biology, both in the IU Bloomington College of Arts and
Science's Department of Biology, authored the report with biology
undergraduates Olivia G. Schmidt, Ian A. Gelarden and Raymond C. Parrish
II.
The team used the microscopic roundworm Caenorhabditis elegans as a host and the pathogenic bacteria Serratia marcescens
to generate a host-parasite coevolutionary system in a controlled
environment, allowing them to conduct more than 70 evolution experiments
testing the Red Queen Hypothesis. They genetically manipulated the
mating system of C. elegans, causing populations to mate either
sexually, by self-fertilization, or a mixture of both within the same
population. Then they exposed those populations to the S. marcescens parasite. The parasites were either allowed to coevolve with C. elegans
or were prevented from evolving. The researchers then determined which
mating system gave populations an evolutionary advantage.
"We found that the self-fertilizing populations of C. elegans
were rapidly driven extinct by the coevolving parasites, a result
consistent with the Red Queen Hypothesis," Morran said. On the other
hand, sex allowed populations to keep pace with their parasites. "Sex
helped populations adapt to their coevolving parasites, allowing parents
to produce offspring that were resistant to infection and ultimately
avoid extinction," he noted.
In host populations where either sex or self-fertilization were
possible, the evolutionary state of the parasite determined the most
effective reproductive strategy. When the parasite did not coevolve,
self-fertilization evolved as the dominant form of host reproduction.
However, when the parasite was allowed to coevolve with the hosts, then
sex became the favored reproductive strategy.
"Coevolution with the pathogen not only favored sex over
self-fertilization, but also allowed sex to be maintained throughout the
experiment," Morran said.
These results are consistent with the Red Queen Hypothesis and may go
a long way toward explaining the widespread existence of sex.
"Coevolving parasites seem to be very common in nature," said Lively.
"The experiment shows that coevolution with parasites, but not the
presence of parasites per se, selects for higher levels of outcrossing.
Thus the coevolutionary struggle between hosts and their parasites could
explain the existence of males." /Science Daily/
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