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Research data supporting: "Activation of immune defences against parasitoid wasps does not underlie the cost of infection"


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Type

Dataset

Change log

Authors

Geldman, Emma 
Leitão, Alexandre 

Description

Parasites reduce the fitness of their hosts, and different causes of this damage have fundamentally different consequences for the evolution of immune defences. Damage to the host may result from the parasite directly harming its host, often due to the production of virulence factors that manipulate host physiology. Alternatively, the host may be harmed by the activation of its own immune defences, as these can be energetically demanding or cause self-harm. A well-studied model of the cost of infection is Drosophila melanogaster and its common natural enemy, parasitoid wasps. Infected Drosophila larvae rely on humoral and cellular immune mechanisms to form a capsule around the parasitoid egg and kill it. Infection results in a developmental delay and reduced adult body size. To disentangle the effects of virulence factors and immune defences on these costs, we artificially activated anti-parasitoid immune defences in the absence of virulence factors. Despite immune activation triggering extensive differentiation and proliferation of immune cells together with hyperglycaemia, it did not result in a developmental delay or reduced body size. We conclude that the costs of infection do not result from these aspects of the immune response and may instead result from the parasite directly damaging the host. The data supporting these results and scripts to reproduce plots and statistics are in this submission

Version

Software / Usage instructions

The datasets contains scripts written in the R language

Keywords

Drosophila, Immunity, Parasitoid

Publisher

Sponsorship
Natural Environment Research Council (NE/P00184X/1)
This work was funded by a Natural Environment Research Council grant (NE/P00184X/1) to FMJ and ABL. ABL was also supported by the European Molecular Biology Organization fellowship (ALT-1556).
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