Genetic variation in trophic avoidance behaviour shows fruit flies are generally attracted to bacterial substrates

Katy M. Monteith, Phoebe Thornhill, Pedro F. Vale*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract / Description of output

Pathogen avoidance behaviours are often assumed to be an adaptive host defence. However, there is limited experimental data on heritable, intrapopulation phenotypic variation for avoidance, a strong prerequisite for adaptive responses to selection. We investigated trophic pathogen avoidance in 122 inbred Drosophila melanogaster lines, and in a derived outbred population. Using the FlyPAD system, we tracked the feeding choice that flies made between substrates that were either clean or contained a bacterial pathogen. We uncovered significant, but weakly heritable variation in the preference index among fly lines. However, instead of avoidance, most lines demonstrated a preference for substrates containing several bacterial pathogens, showing avoidance only for extremely high bacterial concentrations. Bacterial preference was not associated with susceptibility to infection and was retained in flies with disrupted immune signalling. Phenotype-genotype association analysis indicated several novel genes (CG2321, CG2006, ptp99A) associated with increased preference for the bacterial substrate, while the amino-acid transporter sobremesa was associated with greater aversion. Given known fitness benefits of consuming high-protein diets, our results suggest that bacterial attraction may instead reflect a dietary preference for protein over carbohydrate. More work quantifying intrapopulation variation in avoidance behaviours is needed to fully assess its importance in host-pathogen evolutionary ecology.
Original languageEnglish
Article numbere70541
Number of pages14
JournalEcology and Evolution
Volume14
Issue number11
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 10 Nov 2024

Keywords / Materials (for Non-textual outputs)

  • Pathogen avoidance
  • GWAS
  • genetic variation
  • bacterial infection
  • Immune deficiency (IMD) pathway
  • feeding

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