Characterizing the evolution of defense in a tripartite marine symbiosis using adaptive dynamics
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| Publication date | 02-2025 |
| Journal | Evolution letters |
| Volume | Issue number | 9 | 1 |
| Pages (from-to) | 105-114 |
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| Abstract |
The evolution and maintenance of symbiotic systems remains a fascinating
puzzle. While the coevolutionary dynamics of bipartite (host–symbiont)
systems are well-studied, the dynamics of more complex systems have only
recently garnered attention with increasing technological advances. We
model a tripartite system inspired by the marine symbiotic relationship
between the alga Bryopsis sp., its intracellular defensive bacterial symbiont “Candidatus Endobryopsis kahalalidifaciens,” which produces a toxin that protects the alga against fish herbivores, and the sea-slug Elysia rufescens (Zan et al., 2019),
which is not deterred by the toxin. We disentangle the role of
selection on different actors within this system by investigating
evolutionary scenarios where defense evolves as (i) a host-controlled
trait that reduces algal reproductive ability; (ii) a
symbiont-controlled trait that impacts symbiont transmission; and (iii) a
trait jointly controlled by both host and symbiont. Optimal investment
in defensive toxins varies based on the characteristics of the host,
symbiont, and sea slug; and evolutionary trajectories are modulated by
trade-off shape, i.e., a strongly decelerating trade-off between defense
and symbiont transmission can drive symbiont diversification via
evolutionary branching. Increasing slug herbivory reduces host
investment in defense to favor reproduction, while symbiont investment
in defense first declines and then increases as host density declines to
the degree that horizontal symbiont transmission is no longer
beneficial. Increasing vertical transmission selects for reduced defense
by the host when it evolves as a jointly controlled trait, as a result
of investment by the symbiont. Our theoretical exploration of the
evolution of defensive symbiosis in scenarios involving interactions
with multiple herbivores provides a first window into the origin and
maintenance of the Bryopsis sp. system, and adds another piece to the puzzle of the evolution of symbiotic systems.
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| Document type | Article |
| Note | With supplementary file. |
| Language | English |
| Published at | https://doi.org/10.1093/evlett/qrae052 |
| Downloads |
qrae052
(Final published version)
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| Supplementary materials | |
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