The relationship of within-host multiplication and virulence in a plant-virus system.

Virulence does not represent any obvious advantage to parasites. Most models of virulence evolution assume that virulence is an unavoidable consequence of within-host multiplication of parasites, resulting in trade-offs between within-host multiplication and between-host transmission fitness compone...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Israel Pagán, Carlos Alonso-Blanco, Fernando García-Arenal
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2007-08-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC1950075?pdf=render
id doaj-b2b94a5425d84052ac047dcba834658d
record_format Article
spelling doaj-b2b94a5425d84052ac047dcba834658d2020-11-25T01:49:03ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032007-08-0128e78610.1371/journal.pone.0000786The relationship of within-host multiplication and virulence in a plant-virus system.Israel PagánCarlos Alonso-BlancoFernando García-ArenalVirulence does not represent any obvious advantage to parasites. Most models of virulence evolution assume that virulence is an unavoidable consequence of within-host multiplication of parasites, resulting in trade-offs between within-host multiplication and between-host transmission fitness components. Experimental support for the central assumption of this hypothesis, i.e., for a positive correlation between within-host multiplication rates and virulence, is limited for plant-parasite systems.We have addressed this issue in the system Arabidopsis thaliana-Cucumber mosaic virus (CMV). Virus multiplication and the effect of infection on plant growth and on viable seed production were quantified for 21 Arabidopsis wild genotypes infected by 3 CMV isolates. The effect of infection on plant growth and seed production depended of plant architecture and length of postembryonic life cycle, two genetically-determined traits, as well as on the time of infection in the plant's life cycle. A relationship between virus multiplication and virulence was not a general feature of this host-parasite system. This could be explained by tolerance mechanisms determined by the host genotype and operating differently on two components of plant fitness, biomass production and resource allocation to seeds. However, a positive relationship between virus multiplication and virulence was detected for some accessions with short life cycle and high seed weight to biomass ratio, which show lower levels of tolerance to infection.These results show that genotype-specific tolerance mechanisms may lead to the absence of a clear relationship between parasite multiplication and virulence. Furthermore, a positive correlation between parasite multiplication and virulence may occur only in some genotypes and/or environmental conditions for a given host-parasite system. Thus, our results challenge the general validity of the trade-off hypothesis for virulence evolution, and stress the need of considering the effect of both the host and parasite genotypes in analyses of host-parasite interactions.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC1950075?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Israel Pagán
Carlos Alonso-Blanco
Fernando García-Arenal
spellingShingle Israel Pagán
Carlos Alonso-Blanco
Fernando García-Arenal
The relationship of within-host multiplication and virulence in a plant-virus system.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Israel Pagán
Carlos Alonso-Blanco
Fernando García-Arenal
author_sort Israel Pagán
title The relationship of within-host multiplication and virulence in a plant-virus system.
title_short The relationship of within-host multiplication and virulence in a plant-virus system.
title_full The relationship of within-host multiplication and virulence in a plant-virus system.
title_fullStr The relationship of within-host multiplication and virulence in a plant-virus system.
title_full_unstemmed The relationship of within-host multiplication and virulence in a plant-virus system.
title_sort relationship of within-host multiplication and virulence in a plant-virus system.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2007-08-01
description Virulence does not represent any obvious advantage to parasites. Most models of virulence evolution assume that virulence is an unavoidable consequence of within-host multiplication of parasites, resulting in trade-offs between within-host multiplication and between-host transmission fitness components. Experimental support for the central assumption of this hypothesis, i.e., for a positive correlation between within-host multiplication rates and virulence, is limited for plant-parasite systems.We have addressed this issue in the system Arabidopsis thaliana-Cucumber mosaic virus (CMV). Virus multiplication and the effect of infection on plant growth and on viable seed production were quantified for 21 Arabidopsis wild genotypes infected by 3 CMV isolates. The effect of infection on plant growth and seed production depended of plant architecture and length of postembryonic life cycle, two genetically-determined traits, as well as on the time of infection in the plant's life cycle. A relationship between virus multiplication and virulence was not a general feature of this host-parasite system. This could be explained by tolerance mechanisms determined by the host genotype and operating differently on two components of plant fitness, biomass production and resource allocation to seeds. However, a positive relationship between virus multiplication and virulence was detected for some accessions with short life cycle and high seed weight to biomass ratio, which show lower levels of tolerance to infection.These results show that genotype-specific tolerance mechanisms may lead to the absence of a clear relationship between parasite multiplication and virulence. Furthermore, a positive correlation between parasite multiplication and virulence may occur only in some genotypes and/or environmental conditions for a given host-parasite system. Thus, our results challenge the general validity of the trade-off hypothesis for virulence evolution, and stress the need of considering the effect of both the host and parasite genotypes in analyses of host-parasite interactions.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC1950075?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT israelpagan therelationshipofwithinhostmultiplicationandvirulenceinaplantvirussystem
AT carlosalonsoblanco therelationshipofwithinhostmultiplicationandvirulenceinaplantvirussystem
AT fernandogarciaarenal therelationshipofwithinhostmultiplicationandvirulenceinaplantvirussystem
AT israelpagan relationshipofwithinhostmultiplicationandvirulenceinaplantvirussystem
AT carlosalonsoblanco relationshipofwithinhostmultiplicationandvirulenceinaplantvirussystem
AT fernandogarciaarenal relationshipofwithinhostmultiplicationandvirulenceinaplantvirussystem
_version_ 1725009305384517632