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Publication details

Document type
Journal articles

Document subtype
Full paper

Title
Microbes are potential key players in the evolution of life histories and aging in Caenorhabditis elegans

Participants in the publication
Josiane Santos (Author)
Centro de Ecologia, Evolução e Alterações Ambientais
Margarida Matos (Author)
Centro de Ecologia, Evolução e Alterações Ambientais
Dep. Biologia Animal
Thomas Flatt (Author)
Ivo M. Chelo (Author)
Centro de Ecologia, Evolução e Alterações Ambientais
Dep. Biologia Animal

Summary
Microbes can have profound effects on host fitness and health and the appearance of late-onset diseases. Host–microbe interactions thus represent a major environmental context for healthy aging of the host and might also mediate trade-offs between life-history traits in the evolution of host senescence. Here, we have used the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans to study how host–microbe interactions may modulate the evolution of life histories and aging. We first characterized the effects of two non-pathogenic and one pathogenic Escherichia coli strains, together with the pathogenic Serratia marcescens DB11 strain, on population growth rates and survival of C. elegans from five different genetic backgrounds. We then focused on an outbred C. elegans population, to understand if microbe-specific effects on the reproductive schedule and in traits such as developmental rate and survival were also expressed in the presence of males and standing genetic variation, which could be relevant for the evolution of C. elegans and other nematode species in nature. Our results show that host–microbe interactions have a substantial host-genotype-dependent impact on the reproductive aging and survival of the nematode host. Although both pathogenic bacteria reduced host survival in comparison with benign strains, they differed in how they affected other host traits. Host fertility and population growth rate were affected by S. marcescens DB11 only during early adulthood, whereas this occurred at later ages with the pathogenic E. coli IAI1. In both cases, these effects were largely dependent on the host genotypes. Given such microbe-specific genotypic differences in host life history, we predict that the evolution of reproductive schedules and senescence might be critically contingent on host–microbe interactions in nature.

Date of Submisson/Request
2023-04-21
Date of Acceptance
2023-09-01
Date of Publication
2023-09

Institution
FACULDADE DE CIÊNCIAS DA UNIVERSIDADE DE LISBOA

Where published
Ecology and Evolution

Publication Identifiers
ISSN - 2045-7758

Publisher
Wiley

Volume
13
Number
9

Number of pages
13
Starting page
1
Last page
13

Document Identifiers
DOI - https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.10537
URL - http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.10537

Rankings
Web Of Science Q3 (2022) - 2.6 - Evolutionary Biology
SCIMAGO Q1 (2022) - 0.918 - Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Keywords
aging C. elegans host– microbe interactions life-history evolution microbes trade-offs

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APA
Josiane Santos, Margarida Matos, Thomas Flatt, Ivo M. Chelo, (2023). Microbes are potential key players in the evolution of life histories and aging in Caenorhabditis elegans. Ecology and Evolution, 13, 1-13. ISSN 2045-7758. eISSN . http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.10537

IEEE
Josiane Santos, Margarida Matos, Thomas Flatt, Ivo M. Chelo, "Microbes are potential key players in the evolution of life histories and aging in Caenorhabditis elegans" in Ecology and Evolution, vol. 13, pp. 1-13, 2023. 10.1002/ece3.10537

BIBTEX
@article{59442, author = {Josiane Santos and Margarida Matos and Thomas Flatt and Ivo M. Chelo}, title = {Microbes are potential key players in the evolution of life histories and aging in Caenorhabditis elegans}, journal = {Ecology and Evolution}, year = 2023, pages = {1-13}, volume = 13 }