|
| |
|
Science
|
| |
|
|
Neutral Drift & Polymorphism in Gene-for-Gene Systems
|
| |
|
Marcel Salathé, Almut Scherer and Sebastian Bonhoeffer
Ecology Letters,
8: 925-932 ( 2005)
PDF
|
| |
|
Abstract
Pathogens are a main driving force of the evolution of plants and animals.
Being resistant to diseases confers a high selective advantage to hosts,
yet many host-pathogen systems show a remarkable degree of polymorphism of
host resistance and pathogen virulence. The most common explanation of this
phenomenon is that both resistance and virulence genes are costly and that
there is selection against those genes when they are unnecessary. Here, we
use stochastic multi-locus simulations to show that the origin and the
maintenance of genetic polymorphism in plant-pathogen systems can be
explained without costs. In multi-locus gene-for-gene systems, temporal
domination of a super pathogen can cause polymorphism in resistance through
neutral drift. With an increasing number of susceptible alleles in the host
population, pathogen types other than the super race are able to cause
infections and invade the population, leading to higher pathogen diversity
and in turn to higher host diversity.
| | |
|
|