A history of symbiosis impacts the host evolutionary trajectory in experimentally evolved amoebas

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A history of symbiosis impacts the host evolutionary trajectory in experimentally evolved amoebas

Authors

Jahan, I.; Larsen, T. J.; Strassmann, J. E.; Queller, D. C.

Abstract

Biological diversity driven by endosymbiosis arises from the intertwined evolution of microbes and their hosts. Each partner affects the fitness and therefore the evolution of the other. Here, we tested a further question: does the history of symbiosis affect evolution even after the partnership is dissolved? We analyzed phenotypic data from experimentally evolved strains of Dictyostelium discoideum hosts, each of which had had its symbiont removed, to study how their traits evolved. We found that host trait evolution was affected by the prior history of infection, specifically by which of three Paraburkolderia bacterial symbionts had been removed. Thus, symbionts affect not only current evolution but also generate path dependence that affects the subsequent evolutionary trajectories even after the symbionts are lost.

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