4.5 Article

Gene flow accelerates adaptation to a parasite

Journal

EVOLUTION
Volume 77, Issue 6, Pages 1468-1478

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/evolut/qpad048

Keywords

selection experimental; Serratia marcescens; Caenorhabditis elegans; gene flow; adaptation; parasitism

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Gene flow can increase additive genetic variation and introduce beneficial alleles, facilitating adaptation. However, it can also impede adaptation by disrupting genotypes, introducing harmful alleles, and creating negative interactions. This study found that gene flow increased parasite resistance in nematodes and that gene flow from adapted populations resulted in greater resistance increases, especially from novel genetic backgrounds. These findings demonstrate the importance of gene flow in adaptation and highlight the influence of source population characteristics.
Gene flow into populations can increase additive genetic variation and introduce novel beneficial alleles, thus facilitating adaptation. However, gene flow may also impede adaptation by disrupting beneficial genotypes, introducing deleterious alleles, or creating novel dominant negative interactions. While theory and fieldwork have provided insight into the effects of gene flow, direct experimental tests are rare. Here, we evaluated the effects of gene flow on adaptation in the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans during exposure to the bacterial parasite, Serratia marcescens. We evolved hosts against nonevolving parasites for 10 passages while controlling host gene flow and source population. We used source nematode populations with three different genetic backgrounds (one similar to the sink population and two different) and two evolutionary histories (previously adapted to S. marcescens or naive). We found that populations with gene flow exhibited greater increases in parasite resistance than those without gene flow. Additionally, gene flow from adapted populations resulted in greater increases in resistance than gene flow from naive populations, particularly with gene flow from novel genetic backgrounds. Overall, this work demonstrates that gene flow can facilitate adaptation and suggests that the genetic architecture and evolutionary history of source populations can alter the sink population's response to selection.

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