Evolutionary consequences of viral resistance in the marine picoeukaryote Ostreococcus tauri
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Abstract
In marine environments, eukaryotic marine microalgae coexist with the viruses that
infect them. Marine microalgae are the main primary producers in the oceans and are
at the base of the marine food web. Viruses play important roles in top-down control
of algae populations, cycling of organic matter, and as evolutionary drivers of their
hosts. Algae must adapt in response to the strong selection pressure that viruses
impose for resistance to infection. In addition to biotic selection pressures such as
viral infections, algae must also adapt to their abiotic environment. Global climate
change is affecting temperature, salinity, pH, light and nutrient concentrations in the
oceans, particularly in surface waters, where microalgae live. Currently, little is
known about how consistent the effects of viruses on their hosts are, whether the cost
of host resistance varies across environments, and whether there is a trade-off
between maintaining resistance to viruses and adapting to other environmental
changes.
The marine picoeukaryote Ostreococcus tauri is abundant in Mediterranean lagoons,
where it experiences large fluctuations in environmental conditions and co-occurs
with lytic viruses (Ostreococcus tauri viruses – OtVs). Viral infection causes lysis of
susceptible (S) cells, however a small proportion of cells are resistant (R) and avoid
lysis. Some resistant O. tauri populations can coexist with infectious viruses, and it
has been proposed that these viruses are produced by a minority of susceptible cells
within a mainly resistant population. These populations are referred to as resistant
producers (RP). Virus production in RP populations is unstable and eventually they
shift to R populations. I used O. tauri and one of its viruses, OtV5, as a model
system to investigate whether cells that are susceptible or resistant to virus infection
adapt to environmental change differently and whether there is a cost of being
resistant.
For the first time, I evolved susceptible and resistant hosts of a marine alga
separately under a range of environments and directly compared their plastic and
evolved responses. I showed that resistant populations of O. tauri maintained their
resistance for more than 200 generations in the absence of viruses across all
environments, indicating that the resistance mechanism is difficult to reverse.
Furthermore, I did not detect a cost of being resistant, as measured by population
growth rate and competitive ability. Virus production in RP populations stopped in
all environments and all populations became R.
In addition, I found that virus production in RP O. tauri populations can fluctuate
before completely ceasing, and that phosphate affected the length of time it took for
virus production to stop. These results, combined with mathematical modelling of O.
tauri infection dynamics, provide support for the prediction that RP populations
consist of a mixed population of susceptible and resistant cells.
By examining multiple environments and resistance types, we can better understand
first, how microalgae populations adapt to environmental change and second, the
ecological and evolutionary consequences of maintaining resistance to viruses in
common marine picoeukaryotes.
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