When a viral infection spread through five
genetically2 identical mice in a row, the virus
replicated3 faster and became more
virulent4 or severe. But when the infection spread one-by-one through five genetically diverse mice, the virus had trouble adapting and became less virulent. By showing this long-suspected
mechanism5 holds true within a single species of vertebrate animal, namely, mice, the University of Utah study suggests that increased
genetic1 diversity should be promoted in
livestock6 and in captive-bred endangered species so as to limit their risk of getting deadly infections.
"This study showed a surprising rapid and large effect of genetic diversity in mice that dramatically reduced the replication of virus infecting the mice and the severity of disease caused by the virus," says biology professor Wayne Potts. He is senior author of the study published online this month in the British journal
Proceedings7 of the Royal Society B. "There's a reason we are not clones of our mom and dad," says the study's first author, Jason Kubinak, a postdoctoral fellow in biology. "Among other reasons, it's because
mechanisms8 that promote genetic differences between us probably protect us from more severe infectious disease."Indeed, Potts and Kubinak say their study's findings support the "sex-against
virulence9 hypothesis." It argues that sexual reproduction, which promotes genetic diversity, may have evolved as a way to counter the ability of viruses and other pathogens to rapidly adapt to their hosts and gain virulence.
"The idea is that sexual reproduction produces different genetic
makeups11 in all the kids so they are different than mom's and dad's, and therefore become more difficult to infect," Potts says. "Our study simulates this condition. The inbred mouse strain is like an asexual line because they all have the same genetic
makeup10. This is one of the first empirical
demonstrations12 of how pathogens could make it so that sexual reproduction had great benefits in providing resistance to diseases."(Another hypothesis is that sexual reproduction evolved to effectively weed out many of the harmful genetic mutations that occur every generation.)Kubinak and Potts conducted the research with University of Utah colleagues Douglas Cornwall, a doctoral student in biology, and Fred Adler, a professor of mathematics and biology, along with virologist Kim Hasenkrug, of Rocky Mountain Laboratories, a Hamilton, Montana, lab of the National Institutes of Health. The study was funded by the National Science Foundation and National Institutes of Health.