Evolutionary biologists demonstrate that male fruit flies manipulate their female partners

Reproduction: How male flies enforce their interests
Fruit flies of the species Drosophila melanogaster during mating. Credit: Mareike Koppik

During mating, both males and females sometimes evolve creative strategies to pursue their interests. Researchers from Münster (Germany) and Lausanne (Switzerland) now report that male flies manipulate their partners primarily in order to increase their own chances in reproductive competition. The study was published in the journal PNAS.

The fundamental biological process of reproduction can differ greatly from animal species to species. Both and sometimes evolve creative strategies in pursuing their interests in these mating interactions. In small species such as the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster, the female receives proteins through the male's seminal fluid, which, after mating, cause radical changes in her behaviour and in the processes occurring inside her body. The proteins increase her activity, reduce her sexual receptivity and stimulate her immune system.

It has been known for some time that such processes are not always beneficial for both sexes. The researchers in the current study have now taken a closer look at which mechanisms change evolutionarily if there are no conflicts of interest between the sexes, i.e. competition between males is eliminated. The result: Male flies produce fewer proteins in their seminal fluid that are responsible for changing the behaviour of the females. This means that mainly manipulate their partners in order to increase their own chances in reproductive competition—as a side effect, females often have health disadvantages. "With the current study, we confirm a theory that has existed for a long time," says evolutionary biologist Claudia Fricke, a research group leader at the University of Münster. The study has been published in the journal PNAS (Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences).

Background and methods:

In order to determine the extent to which the different interests pursued by each sex play a role in the evolution of fruit flies, the researchers arranged for individual pairs of flies to live monogamously over many generations—contrary to their normal mode of reproduction. Only one male and one female mated with each other, ruling out any opportunity for antagonistic interactions among potential partners. The male only gained as many offspring as the female could lay eggs. In a second group, five males and five females mated freely with one another. This polygamous lifestyle, a perfectly normal one for these insects, naturally created competition—both between males and between females, with the scope for antagonistic interactions. The total population was, however, of equal size in both groups.

After 150 generations and 10 years of sexual selection, the researchers compared the behaviour and physiology of the flies in each group. They found that, in the first days after fertilisation, polygamous females laid one-third more eggs than those flies that had mated in an environment containing only one mating partner. Also, the females that had mated with a polygamous male were noticeably more restless—as shown in recordings of movement patterns. Both are factors that are influenced by receipt of these male seminal fluid proteins.

Why is that of advantage to the male? Since female flies are able to store the sperm of several partners and use it for more than a week to fertilise their eggs, the first male the female mates with does everything to ensure that she lays as many eggs as she can as quickly as possible and does not reproduce with others. This early investment is to the detriment of the female, which is discouraged from saving her energy and procreating over a longer time period. This was also shown in the study: "Females that had been with polygamous males died twice as frequently—within a few hours of mating—compared to females in relationships," says Laurent Keller from the University of Lausanne, who was involved in the study with his colleague Brian Hollis.

In a further step, the scientists read out the expression of genes of female fruit flies after mating. In the female's abdomen and brain, i.e. in the structures responsible for reproduction and for any changes in behaviour—the researchers measured the expression of genes important for reproduction. They discovered that these genes are far less expressed in females, which lived monogamously.

This corresponded to what they found in males. Without any competition, the monogamous males had a lower expression of genes coding for male seminal fluid proteins with which females can be manipulated after mating. In subsequent studies, the researchers hope to identify further genes that play a role in this process in both female and male . The general principles of their observation may also be transferable to other insect species with a similar system.

More information: Brian Hollis et al, Sexual conflict drives male manipulation of female postmating responses in Drosophila melanogaster, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2019). DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1821386116

Citation: Evolutionary biologists demonstrate that male fruit flies manipulate their female partners (2019, April 12) retrieved 25 April 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2019-04-evolutionary-biologists-male-fruit-flies.html
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