Differential tolerance to direct and indirect density-dependent costs of viral infection in Arabidopsis thaliana.

Population density and costs of parasite infection may condition the capacity of organisms to grow, survive and reproduce, i.e. their competitive ability. In host-parasite systems there are different competitive interactions: among uninfected hosts, among infected hosts, and between uninfected and i...

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Main Authors: Israel Pagán, Carlos Alonso-Blanco, Fernando García-Arenal
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2009-07-01
Series:PLoS Pathogens
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2712083?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-dbc9ecc3ef134f3c89f9a3b6d22d88c82020-11-25T01:35:06ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Pathogens1553-73661553-73742009-07-0157e100053110.1371/journal.ppat.1000531Differential tolerance to direct and indirect density-dependent costs of viral infection in Arabidopsis thaliana.Israel PagánCarlos Alonso-BlancoFernando García-ArenalPopulation density and costs of parasite infection may condition the capacity of organisms to grow, survive and reproduce, i.e. their competitive ability. In host-parasite systems there are different competitive interactions: among uninfected hosts, among infected hosts, and between uninfected and infected hosts. Consequently, parasite infection results in a direct cost, due to parasitism itself, and in an indirect cost, due to modification of the competitive ability of the infected host. Theory predicts that host fitness reduction will be higher under the combined effects of costs of parasitism and competition than under each factor separately. However, experimental support for this prediction is scarce, and derives mostly from animal-parasite systems. We have analysed the interaction between parasite infection and plant density using the plant-parasite system of Arabidopsis thaliana and the generalist virus Cucumber mosaic virus (CMV). Plants of three wild genotypes grown at different densities were infected by CMV at various prevalences, and the effects of infection on plant growth and reproduction were quantified. Results demonstrate that the combined effects of host density and parasite infection may result either in a reduction or in an increase of the competitive ability of the host. The two genotypes investing a higher proportion of resources to reproduction showed tolerance to the direct cost of infection, while the genotype investing a higher proportion of resources to growth showed tolerance to the indirect cost of infection. Our findings show that the outcome of the interaction between host density and parasitism depends on the host genotype, which determines the plasticity of life-history traits and consequently, the host capacity to develop different tolerance mechanisms to the direct or indirect costs of parasitism. These results indicate the high relevance of host density and parasitism in determining the competitive ability of a plant, and stress the need to simultaneously consider both factors to understand the selective pressures that drive host-parasite co-evolution.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2712083?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
Differential tolerance to direct and indirect density-dependent costs of viral infection in Arabidopsis thaliana.
PLoS Pathogens
author_facet Israel Pagán
Carlos Alonso-Blanco
Fernando García-Arenal
author_sort Israel Pagán
title Differential tolerance to direct and indirect density-dependent costs of viral infection in Arabidopsis thaliana.
title_short Differential tolerance to direct and indirect density-dependent costs of viral infection in Arabidopsis thaliana.
title_full Differential tolerance to direct and indirect density-dependent costs of viral infection in Arabidopsis thaliana.
title_fullStr Differential tolerance to direct and indirect density-dependent costs of viral infection in Arabidopsis thaliana.
title_full_unstemmed Differential tolerance to direct and indirect density-dependent costs of viral infection in Arabidopsis thaliana.
title_sort differential tolerance to direct and indirect density-dependent costs of viral infection in arabidopsis thaliana.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS Pathogens
issn 1553-7366
1553-7374
publishDate 2009-07-01
description Population density and costs of parasite infection may condition the capacity of organisms to grow, survive and reproduce, i.e. their competitive ability. In host-parasite systems there are different competitive interactions: among uninfected hosts, among infected hosts, and between uninfected and infected hosts. Consequently, parasite infection results in a direct cost, due to parasitism itself, and in an indirect cost, due to modification of the competitive ability of the infected host. Theory predicts that host fitness reduction will be higher under the combined effects of costs of parasitism and competition than under each factor separately. However, experimental support for this prediction is scarce, and derives mostly from animal-parasite systems. We have analysed the interaction between parasite infection and plant density using the plant-parasite system of Arabidopsis thaliana and the generalist virus Cucumber mosaic virus (CMV). Plants of three wild genotypes grown at different densities were infected by CMV at various prevalences, and the effects of infection on plant growth and reproduction were quantified. Results demonstrate that the combined effects of host density and parasite infection may result either in a reduction or in an increase of the competitive ability of the host. The two genotypes investing a higher proportion of resources to reproduction showed tolerance to the direct cost of infection, while the genotype investing a higher proportion of resources to growth showed tolerance to the indirect cost of infection. Our findings show that the outcome of the interaction between host density and parasitism depends on the host genotype, which determines the plasticity of life-history traits and consequently, the host capacity to develop different tolerance mechanisms to the direct or indirect costs of parasitism. These results indicate the high relevance of host density and parasitism in determining the competitive ability of a plant, and stress the need to simultaneously consider both factors to understand the selective pressures that drive host-parasite co-evolution.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2712083?pdf=render
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