» Articles » PMID: 18957303

The Role of Epistasis on the Evolution of Recombination in Host-parasite Coevolution

Overview
Date 2008 Oct 30
PMID 18957303
Citations 10
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Antagonistic coevolution between hosts and parasites is known to affect selection on recombination in hosts. The Red Queen Hypothesis (RQH) posits that genetic shuffling is beneficial for hosts because it quickly creates resistant genotypes. Indeed, a large body of theoretical studies have shown that for many models of the genetic interaction between host and parasite, the coevolutionary dynamics of hosts and parasites generate selection for recombination or sexual reproduction. Here we investigate models in which the effect of the host on the parasite (and vice versa) depend approximately multiplicatively on the number of matched alleles. Contrary to expectation, these models generate a dynamical behavior that strongly selects against recombination/sex. We investigate this atypical behavior analytically and numerically. Specifically we show that two complementary equilibria are responsible for generating strong linkage disequilibria of opposite sign, which in turn causes strong selection against sex. The biological relevance of this finding stems from the fact that these phenomena can also be observed if hosts are attacked by two parasites that affect host fitness independently. Hence the role of the Red Queen Hypothesis in natural host parasite systems where infection by multiple parasites is the rule rather than the exception needs to be reevaluated.

Citing Articles

Host-parasite coevolution and the stability of genetic kin recognition.

Scott T, Grafen A, West S Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2023; 120(30):e2220761120.

PMID: 37463213 PMC: 10372634. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2220761120.


Genetic slippage after sex maintains diversity for parasite resistance in a natural host population.

Ameline C, Voegtli F, Andras J, Dexter E, Engelstadter J, Ebert D Sci Adv. 2022; 8(46):eabn0051.

PMID: 36399570 PMC: 9674289. DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.abn0051.


A Two-Locus System with Strong Epistasis Underlies Rapid Parasite-Mediated Evolution of Host Resistance.

Ameline C, Bourgeois Y, Vogtli F, Savola E, Andras J, Engelstadter J Mol Biol Evol. 2020; 38(4):1512-1528.

PMID: 33258959 PMC: 8042741. DOI: 10.1093/molbev/msaa311.


Parasite diversity drives rapid host dynamics and evolution of resistance in a bacteria-phage system.

Betts A, Gifford D, MacLean R, King K Evolution. 2016; 70(5):969-78.

PMID: 27005577 PMC: 4982092. DOI: 10.1111/evo.12909.


Pathogen selection drives nonoverlapping associations between HLA loci.

Penman B, Ashby B, Buckee C, Gupta S Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2013; 110(48):19645-50.

PMID: 24225852 PMC: 3845180. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1304218110.