4.5 Review

Shifting focus from resistance to disease tolerance: A review on hybrid house mice

Journal

ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 12, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.8889

Keywords

Eimeria; hybridization; Mus musculus; pinworms; resistance; tolerance

Funding

  1. German Foundation of Scientific Research (DFG) [285969495/HE 7320/2--1]

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This article reviews the evidence for differences in parasite load between hybrid and parental mice, and the effects of parasites on health and fitness in promoting or preventing hybridization. Recent field studies have found hybrids to be more resistant to certain parasites, but the question of hybrid susceptibility to parasites remains controversial. The authors argue that previous studies have limitations in sample size, statistical analysis, and scope, and suggest the need for further research to assess the relationship between health and resistance.
Parasites have been proposed to modulate the fitness of hybridizing hosts in part based on observations in the European house mouse hybrid zone (HMHZ), a tension zone in which hybrids show reduced fitness. We here review evidence (1) for parasite load differences in hybrid versus parental mice and (2) for health and fitness effects of parasites promoting or preventing introgression and hybridization. The question of relative resistance or susceptibility of hybrids to parasites in the HMHZ has long been controversial. Recent field studies found hybrids to be more resistant than mice from parental subspecies against infections with pinworms and protozoans (Eimeria spp.). We argue that the field studies underlying the contradictory impression of hybrid susceptibility have limitations in sample size, statistical analysis and scope, focusing only on macroparasites. We suggest that weighted evidence from field studies indicate hybrid resistance. Health is a fitness component through which resistance can modulate overall fitness. Resistance, however, should not be extrapolated directly to a fitness effect, as the relationship between resistance and health can be modulated by tolerance. In our own recent work, we found that the relationship between health and resistance (tolerance) differs between infections with the related species E. falciformis and E. ferrisi. Health and tolerance need to be assessed directly and the choice of parasite has made this difficult in previous experimental studies of house mice. We discuss how experimental Eimeria spp. infections in hybrid house mice can address resistance, health and tolerance in conjunction.

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