Mutualisms are often framed as 'delicately balanced antagonisms' (Bronstein, 1994), with the net fitness benefits to both partners potentially masking underlying conflicts of interest. How commonly symbionts evolve to 'cheat' their hosts and hosts evolve to 'sanction' or 'control' uncooperative symbionts is the subject of debate, especially in legume-rhizobium interactions (Frederickson, 2013; Kiers et al., 2003). This kind of antagonistic coevolution should result in either arms-race dynamics characterized by repeated selective sweeps or fluctuating selection dynamics that leave signatures of balancing selection in host and symbiont genomes (Frederickson, 2013; Kortright et al., 2022; O'Brien et al., 2021). In a From the Cover article in this issue of Molecular Ecology, Epstein et al. (2022) combine GWAS and population genomic analyses to assess the evidence for positive or balancing selection consistent with ongoing, antagonistic coevolution between legumes and rhizobia. They found few genomic signatures of fitness conflicts between mutualistic partners, suggesting that legume and rhizobium fitness interests are largely aligned and symbiotic traits are mostly under stabilizing selection. In combination with other recent work (e.g. Batstone et al., 2020), the results of Epstein et al. (2022) indicate that there is little ongoing fitness conflict between legumes and rhizobia that shapes host and symbiont genomes in this system. It may be time to move beyond symbiont 'cheating' and host 'control' as the dominant paradigm for understanding how partners in mutualism coevolve.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/mec.17055 | DOI Listing |
MethodsX
December 2023
Office of Laboratory Animal Medicine, Office of the Director, Division of Intramural Research, National Human Genome Research Institute, NIH, Bethesda, MD, United States.
Distinguishing individuals or small groups is essential for many experiments. The regenerative properties of zebrafish make traditional marking methods for rodent models (e.g.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMol Ecol
July 2023
Department of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Mutualisms are often framed as 'delicately balanced antagonisms' (Bronstein, 1994), with the net fitness benefits to both partners potentially masking underlying conflicts of interest. How commonly symbionts evolve to 'cheat' their hosts and hosts evolve to 'sanction' or 'control' uncooperative symbionts is the subject of debate, especially in legume-rhizobium interactions (Frederickson, 2013; Kiers et al., 2003).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWest Indian Med J
July 2013
Caribbean Public Health Agency, 16-18 Jamaica Boulevard, Generation Park, Port-of-Spain, Trinidad and Tobago.
Objective: To describe epidemiological trends of pandemic influenza A (H1N1) in the English and Dutch-speaking Caribbean during the pandemic period.
Design And Methods: Data on laboratory-confirmed cases and deaths associated with pandemic influenza A (H1N1) contained in two regional databases at the Caribbean Epidemiology Centre (CAREC) were analysed. The data sources were epidemiological and laboratory reports from English and Dutch-speaking countries and the CAREC laboratory information system (LABIS).
Br J Psychol
May 2014
London Psychometric Laboratory, University College London, UK.
Theory and research suggests that features of autism are not restricted to individuals diagnosed with autism spectrum disorders (ASDs), and that autism-like traits vary throughout the general population at lower severities. The present research first investigated the relationship of autism traits with trait emotional intelligence and empathy in a sample of 163 adults aged between 18 and 51 years (44% male). It then examined performance on a set of tasks assessing social cognition and cognitive flexibility in 69 participants with either high or low scores on ASD traits.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFQ Rev Biol
December 2013
Department of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario M5S 3G5, Canada.
How cooperation originates and persists in diverse species, from bacteria to multicellular organisms to human societies, is a major question in evolutionary biology. A large literature asks: what prevents selection for cheating within cooperative lineages? In mutualisms, or cooperative interactions between species, feedback between partners often aligns their fitness interests, such that cooperative symbionts receive more benefits from their hosts than uncooperative symbionts. But how do these feedbacks evolve? Cheaters might invade symbiont populations and select for hosts that preferentially reward or associate with cooperators (often termed sanctions or partner choice); hosts might adapt to variation in symbiont quality that does not amount to cheating (e.
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