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Local mate competition and the sex ratios of malaria parasites, with a focus on Plasmodium mexicanum.

机译:当地伴侣的竞争和疟疾寄生虫的性别比,主要集中在墨西哥疟原虫上。

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摘要

Sex ratio theory is a focus in evolutionary biology that explores how natural selection shapes investment in males and females. It has provided some of the best quantitative evidence of evolution and could find utility in public health efforts through its application to malaria parasites. These parasites have distinct male and female forms that are produced following massive asexual replication, and they mate within the blood-feeding insects that transmit them between vertebrate hosts. A very similar population structure is assumed by local mate competition (LMC), a model from sex ratio theory that predicts female-biased sex ratios dependent on the degree of selfing within a mating patch.;In this dissertation, I test a series of predictions from LMC for the lizard malaria parasite Plasmodium mexicanum. These include: (i) sex ratios have heritable variation that is not constrained by other life history traits; (ii) single-genotype infections have female-biased sex ratios that are determined by male fecundity; (iii) multiple-genotype infections have less biased sex ratios than single genotype infections; (iv) if males are limiting, sex ratios may be less biased when there are fewer parasites present (an extension of LMC called fertility insurance); and (v) less biased sex ratios may also be favored if increased female production yields diminishing returns on transmission to a new vertebrate host. To test these predictions, I combined the study of natural and experimental infections, microscopy (parasite density and sex ratio), molecular genetics (infection genetic diversity), and mathematical modeling (of how transmission patterns might affect sex ratio evolution).;Overall, the results were qualitatively consistent with both LMC and my new model predictions. Sex ratios showed evidence of heritable variation that was unlinked to other life history traits measured. Sex ratios in single-genotype infections were female biased and consistent with the male fecundity observed, and were lower than sex ratios in experimental multiple-genotype infections, as predicted. Sex ratios were not less biased with lower sexual cell density, suggesting that males were not limiting. In fact, the opposite trend was sometimes observed: sex ratios were less biased with more sexual cells. This pattern has been observed previously in this and other species, and the only model that currently predicts such a trend is the new transmission model I outline.;This dissertation contributes to our understanding of sex ratio evolution for malaria parasites in a number of ways. First, it adds evidence to the idea that the selective forces implicated in LMC are at work in malaria parasites and that malaria parasites are able to detect and respond to relevant cues. Second, it helps account for discrepancies in existing data, which have often reached conflicting conclusions. Third, it offers one of the first detailed studies of malaria parasite male fecundity, an essential piece of the sex ratio puzzle. Finally, it outlines a new theoretical extension of LMC that provides novel predictions and highlights areas of study that may be fruitful for future work on malaria parasites and other organisms.
机译:性别比理论是进化生物学的重点,探讨自然选择如何影响对男性和女性的投资。它提供了一些进化的最佳定量证据,并可以通过将其应用于疟疾寄生虫而在公共卫生工作中发挥作用。这些寄生虫具有明显的雄性和雌性形式,这些形式是在大规模无性繁殖后产生的,它们在摄食昆虫中交配,这些昆虫在脊椎动物宿主之间传播它们。本地配偶竞争(LMC)假设了一个非常相似的种群结构,这是一种基于性别比理论的模型,该模型根据交配斑块的自交程度预测女性偏向的性别比。在本论文中,我测试了一系列预测来自LMC的蜥蜴疟疾寄生虫墨西哥疟原虫。其中包括:(一)性别比例具有可遗传的变化,不受其他生活史特征的限制; (ii)单基因型感染具有女性偏向的性别比,由男性生殖力决定; (iii)与单基因型感染相比,多基因型感染的性别比偏少; (iv)如果男性是限制性的,则当寄生虫较少时,性别比例的偏见可能会减少(LMC的一种扩展,称为生育保险); (v)如果增加雌性产量减少传递给新脊椎动物宿主的回报,那么偏向性别比例也可能会受到青睐。为了检验这些预测,我结合了对自然和实验感染,显微镜检查(寄生虫密度和性别比),分子遗传学(感染遗传多样性)和数学建模(传播模式如何影响性别比演变)的研究。结果在质量上与LMC和我的新模型预测一致。性别比显示出遗传变异的证据,该变异与其他生活史特征无关。如预期的那样,单基因型感染的性别比是女性偏见的,与观察到的男性生殖力一致,并且低于实验性多基因型感染的性别比。性别比例并没有因为较低的性细胞密度而受到偏见,这表明男性并没有限制。实际上,有时观察到相反的趋势:性别比例对更多性细胞的偏见较少。这种模式先前已在该物种和其他物种中观察到,目前预测这种趋势的唯一模型是我概述的新的传播模型。本论文以多种方式有助于我们对疟原虫性别比演变的理解。首先,它为证据表明,LMC所牵涉的选择性力量正在疟疾寄生虫中起作用,而疟疾寄生虫能够检测并响应相关线索。其次,它有助于解决现有数据中的差异,这些差异通常得出相互矛盾的结论。第三,它提供了有关疟原虫雄性生殖力的详细研究之一,这是性别比例难题的重要组成部分。最后,它概述了LMC的新理论扩展,它提供了新颖的预测,并强调了可能对疟疾寄生虫和其他生物的未来研究富有成果的研究领域。

著录项

  • 作者

    Neal, Allison Theresa.;

  • 作者单位

    The University of Vermont and State Agricultural College.;

  • 授予单位 The University of Vermont and State Agricultural College.;
  • 学科 Biology Evolution and Development.;Biology Genetics.;Biology Parasitology.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2014
  • 页码 230 p.
  • 总页数 230
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

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