The role of immune-mediated female sperm selection in temporal dynamics of fertilisation bias

Lead Research Organisation: University of East Anglia
Department Name: Biological Sciences

Abstract

The way paternity is distributed across males has considerable impact on the ecology and evolution of a population, regulating the effective population size and the amount of standing genetic variance. Despite intense selection on reproductive success paternity remains highy variable, and understanding the mechanisms underpinning this variation is a fundamental challenge in Biology. Increasing evidence indicates that an important source of variation in paternity originates from processes occurring after insemination. In most organisms the ejaculates of multiple males often compete to fertilise a set of eggs, and females can drastically influence the outcome of this competition through biased responses to the sperm of different males. Females are expected to bias fertilisation in favour of males of higher genetic quality in order to increase the success of their offspring. Because the genetic diversity (heterozyosity) of an individual promotes survival, a increasingly topical hypothesis is that females preferentially utilise the sperm of males that are genetically different from the female to promote offspring heterozygosity. However, evidence for this hypothesis is ambiguous and -contrary to theory- females may often bias fertilisation in favour of genetically similar rather than dissimilar males. Recent evidence from different species including our own work in the red junglefowl indicates that this counterintuitive response may be regulated by genetic similarity at the Major Histocompatibility Complex (MHC). The MHC is a complex of genes that play a fundamental role in immune responses allowing the organism to recognise self from non-self and respond against cells that are not recognised as self. While this immune response enables the organism to combat pathogens and parasites it may also result in a side-effect differential response to sperm of different males. Namely, we expect the female immune system to tolerate sperm of males that share MHC genes with the female and discriminate against the sperm of males that have a different MHC profile. As it is typical of similar immune responses, we also expect female response to the sperm of a certain MHC similarity with the female to change as the female is exposed to successive inseminations with the same type of sperm. It is plausible that, through continued exposure, the female immune system 'learns' to recognise MHC-similar sperm type, thus reducing the bias in paternity. This novel hypothesis is founded on well established immunological mechanisms and represents a biologically plausible proximate explanation consistent with an emergent trend of studies indicating that fertilisation may be biased in favour of genetically similar partners. Elucidating the consequences of MHC-mediated immune responses for female sperm selection would therefore contribute to unravel the mechanisms underpinning variation in paternity in natural populations. The aim of the proposed research is to test experimentally different key predictions of the hypothesis that fertilisation is biased by MHC-mediated immunological responses of the female reproductive tract to the ejaculates of different males. We will test these predictions in a well characterised population of red junglefowl. Red junglefowl are the wild ancestor of the domestic chicken and an ideal system to study MHC-mediated female sperm selection. First, females typically obtain ejaculates from multiple males and are known to bias fertilisation in different ways, including in favour of MHC-similar sperm. Second, poultry techniques of artificial insemination and sperm assays enable us to study post-insemination processes non-invasively and under controlled conditions. Third, the MHC of the fowl is very simple and extremely well characterised. Finally, we have a deep understanding of the mechanisms that modulate paternity skews in this species, including the role of MHC similarity.

Publications

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Bebbington K (2017) Kinship and familiarity mitigate costs of social conflict between Seychelles warbler neighbors. in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America

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Bebbington K (2018) Joint care can outweigh costs of nonkin competition in communal breeders. in Behavioral ecology : official journal of the International Society for Behavioral Ecology

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Carleial R (2020) Temporal dynamics of competitive fertilization in social groups of red junglefowl ( Gallus gallus ) shed new light on avian sperm competition in Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences

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Collet J (2012) Sexual selection and the differential effect of polyandry. in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America

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Collet JM (2014) The measure and significance of Bateman's principles. in Proceedings. Biological sciences

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McDonald GC (2017) Pre- and postcopulatory sexual selection favor aggressive, young males in polyandrous groups of red junglefowl. in Evolution; international journal of organic evolution

 
Description The project is still underway and as of yet we have not finalised our key findings.
Exploitation Route To improve animal breeding practices including artificial insemination breeding so as to allow sexual selection mechanisms with the female to act thus improving the genetic quality and disease resistance of individuals and populations
Sectors Agriculture, Food and Drink,Healthcare

 
Title Data from: Temporal dynamics of competitive fertilization in social groups of red junglefowl (Gallus gallus) shed new light on avian sperm competition 
Description Studies of birds have made a fundamental contribution to elucidating sperm competition processes, experimentally demonstrating the role of individual mechanisms in competitive fertilisation. However, the relative importance of these mechanisms and the way in which they interact under natural conditions remain largely unexplored. Here, we conduct a detailed behavioural study of freely-mating replicate groups of red junglefowl, Gallus gallus, to predict the probability that competing males fertilise individual eggs over the course of 10-day trials. Remating frequently with a female and mating last increased a male's probability of fertilisation, but only for eggs ovulated in the last days of a trial. Conversely, older males, and those mating with more polyandrous females, had consistently lower fertilisation success. Similarly, resistance to a male's mating attempts, particularly by younger females, reduced fertilisation probability. After considering these factors, male social status, partner relatedness and the estimated state of a male extragonadal sperm reserves did not predict sperm competition outcomes. These results shed new light on sperm competition dynamics in taxa such as birds, with prolonged female sperm storage and staggered fertilisations. 
Type Of Material Database/Collection of data 
Year Produced 2020 
Provided To Others? Yes  
URL http://datadryad.org/stash/dataset/doi:10.5061/dryad.cz8w9gj1d